Retrocede — Re tro*cede, v. t. [Pref. retro + cede: cf. F. r[ e]troc[ e]der.] To cede or grant back; as, to retrocede a territory to a former proprietor. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Retrocede — Re tro*cede, v. i. [L. retrocedere; retro backward, back + cedere to go. See {Cede}.] To go back. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
retrocede — index escheat, regress, relapse, retire (retreat), retreat Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
rétrocédé — rétrocédé, ée (ré tro sé dé, dée) part. passé de rétrocéder. Une créance rétrocédée … Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré
retrocedé — Retrocedé, [retroced]ée. Il a la signification de son verbe … Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
retrocede — retrocede1 [re΄trə sēd′] vi. retroceded, retroceding [L retrocedere, to recede: see RETRO & CEDE] to go back; recede retrocession [re΄trəsesh′ən] n. retrocede2 [re΄trə sēd′] vt. retroceded, retroceding … English World dictionary
retrocede — retrocede1 retrocedence, n. retrocessive /re tre ses iv/, adj. /re treuh seed /, v.i., retroceded, retroceding. to go back; recede; retire. [1645 55; < L retrocedere to go back, retire, equiv. to retro RETRO + cedere to go, move; see CEDE]… … Universalium
retrocede — verb a) To grant back. Hospitals retrenched in the 30s while the general practitioners retroceded into a bygone era. b) To go back … Wiktionary
retrocede — Synonyms and related words: back, backslide, cock, decline, die away, diminish, drift away, dwindle, ebb, fade, fade away, fall astern, fall back, fall behind, get behind, go, go away, go backwards, go behind, jerk back, lapse, lapse back, lose… … Moby Thesaurus
retrocede — (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb 1. To move back or away from a point, limit, or mark: ebb, recede, retract, retreat, retrograde, retrogress. See APPROACH. 2. To move in a reverse direction: back, backpedal, backtrack, fall back, retreat, retrograde,… … English dictionary for students