Need another word that means the same as “regress”? Find 21 synonyms and 30 related words for “regress” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Regress” are: retrovert, return, revert, turn back, retrograde, retrogress, fall back, lapse, recidivate, relapse, backslide, go backwards, slip back, drift back, subside, sink back, regression, retrogression, retroversion, reversion, reasoning backward
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “regress” as a noun can have the following definitions:
reasoning backward | Thinking that is coherent and logical. |
regression | A return to an earlier stage of life or a supposed previous life, especially through hypnosis. There was 46 7 per cent complete regression in the placebo group. |
retrogression | Passing from a more complex to a simpler biological form. A retrogression to 19th century attitudes. |
retroversion | Translation back into the original language. Retroversion of the uterus. |
reversion | A property to which someone has the right of reversion. He was given a promise of the reversion of Boraston s job. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “regress” as a verb can have the following definitions:
backslide | Relapse into bad ways or error. There are many things that can cause slimmers to backslide. |
drift back | Cause to be carried by a current. |
fall back | To be given by right or inheritance. |
go backwards | Lead, extend, or afford access. |
lapse | (of a right, privilege, or agreement) become invalid because it is not used, claimed, or renewed; expire. The country has lapsed into chaos. |
recidivate | Go back to bad behavior. Those who recidivate are often minor criminals. |
relapse | Return to (a less active or a worse state. He relapsed into silence. |
retrograde | Show retrograde motion. The glacier retrogrades. |
retrogress | Go back to bad behavior. She retrogressed to the starting point of her rehabilitation. |
retrovert | Go back to a previous state. |
return | Return in kind. The land returned to the family. |
revert | Return to (a former or ancestral type. It is impossible that a fishlike mammal will actually revert to being a true fish. |
sink back | Descend into or as if into some soft substance or place. |
slip back | Move smoothly and easily. |
subside | (of a building or other structure) sink lower into the ground. Patrick subsided into his seat. |
turn back | Have recourse to or make an appeal or request for help or information to. |
ago | Before the present; earlier (used with a measurement of time. Agone is an archaic word for ago. |
atavism | A tendency to revert to something ancient or ancestral. The more civilized a society seems to be the more susceptible it is to its buried atavism. |
back | A person who plays in the backfield. A long back vowel as in dance or bath. |
backslide | Relapse into bad ways or error. There are many things that can cause slimmers to backslide. |
backward | (used of temperament or behavior) marked by a retiring nature. He was not backward in displaying his talents. |
backwards | (of an object’s motion) back towards the starting point. Penny glanced backwards. |
degeneracy | The state or quality of being degenerate. The degeneracy of later Roman work. |
degeneration | Passing from a more complex to a simpler biological form. Degeneration of the muscle fibres. |
dilution | A reduction in the value of a shareholding due to the issue of additional shares in a company without an increase in assets. The antibody was applied at a dilution of 1 50. |
discontinuity | Lack of connection or continuity. There is no significant discontinuity between modern and primitive societies. |
inverse | A reciprocal quantity, mathematical expression, geometric figure, etc. which is the result of inversion. Numerous studies have shown an inverse relationship between exercise and the risk of heart disease. |
past | A past tense or form of a verb. A week went past and nothing changed. |
posthumous | (of a child) born after the death of its father. Newton was the posthumous son of an illiterate yeoman. |
recession | A period of temporary economic decline during which trade and industrial activity are reduced, generally identified by a fall in GDP in two successive quarters. Measures to pull the economy out of recession. |
recrudescence | A return of something after a period of abatement. A recrudescence of age old tensions. |
regression | A defense mechanism in which you flee from reality by assuming a more infantile state. Regression therapy. |
regressive | Adjusted so that the rate decreases as the amount of income increases. Regressive aspects of recent local government reform. |
relapse | Deteriorate in health. He relapsed. |
restitution | The restoration of something lost or stolen to its proper owner. Upon the restitution of the book to its rightful owner the child was given a tongue lashing. |
restoration | The restoration of the Bourbon monarchy in France in 1814 following the fall of Napoleon Louis XVIII was recalled from exile by Talleyrand. The altar paintings seem in need of restoration. |
retreat | Make a retreat from an earlier commitment or activity. The French retreated in disarray. |
retroactive | (especially of legislation) taking effect from a date in the past. Retroactive tax increase. |
retrograde | Show retrograde motion. The outer satellites move in retrograde orbits. |
retrogression | The process of returning to an earlier state, typically a worse one. A retrogression to 19th century attitudes. |
retrospect | Contemplation of things past. In retrospect. |
retrospective | Concerned with or related to the past. Retrospective pay awards. |
return | A coming to or returning home. Return her love. |
reversion | A property to which someone has the right of reversion. There was some reversion to polytheism. |
revert | Turn (one’s eyes or steps) back. He ignored her words by reverting to the former subject. |
throwback | A person or thing having the characteristics of a former time. A lot of his work is a throwback to the fifties. |
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