Idioms for back
Origin of back
1
before 1000; Middle English
bak, Old English
bæc back of the body; cognate with Old Frisian
bek, Old Saxon, Old Norse
bak; perhaps < Indo-European
*bhogo- bending; cf.
bacon
SYNONYMS FOR back
synonym study for back
31.
Back,
hind,
posterior,
rear refer to something situated behind something else.
Back means the opposite of front:
back window.
Hind, and the more formal word
posterior, suggest the rearmost of two or more often similar objects:
hind legs; posterior lobe.
Rear is used of buildings, conveyances, etc., and in military language it is the opposite of fore:
rear end of a truck; rear echelon.
usage note for back
55. Although some object to their use, the phrases
in back of and the shorter—and much older—
back of with the meaning “behind” are fully established as standard in American English:
The car was parked (
in )
back of the house. Both phrases occur in all types of speech and writing.
OTHER WORDS FROM back
back·less, adjectiveWORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH back
back up backupWords nearby back
British Dictionary definitions for back and fill (1 of 2)
Word Origin for back
Old English
bæc; related to Old Norse
bak, Old Frisian
bek, Old High German
bah
British Dictionary definitions for back and fill (2 of 2)
back
2
/ (bæk) /
noun
a large tub or vat, esp one used by brewers
Word Origin for back
C17: from Dutch
bak tub, cistern, from Old French
bac, from Vulgar Latin
bacca (unattested) vessel for liquids
Medical definitions for back and fill
back
[ băk ]
n.
The posterior portion of the trunk of the human body between the neck and the pelvis; the dorsum.
The backbone or spine.
Idioms and Phrases with back and fill (1 of 2)
back and fill
Vacillate, be undecided, as in This measure will never be passed if the town meeting continues to back and fill. This term comes from sailing ships, where it signifies alternately backing and filling the sails, a method used when the wind is running against a ship in a narrow channel. The sail is hauled back against the wind and braced so that the tide or current carries the ship forward against the wind. Then the sail must be swung around and filled, to keep the ship on course. The term's figurative use for indecisiveness dates from the mid-1800s.
Idioms and Phrases with back and fill (2 of 2)
back