Idioms for double

Origin of double

1175–1225; Middle English < Old French < Latin duplus, equivalent to du(o) two + -plus -fold

OTHER WORDS FROM double

dou·ble·ness, noun dou·bler, noun qua·si-dou·ble, adjective qua·si-dou·b·ly, adverb

British Dictionary definitions for double back (1 of 2)

double back

verb

(intr, adverb) to go back in the opposite direction (esp in the phrase double back on one's tracks)

British Dictionary definitions for double back (2 of 2)

Derived forms of double

doubleness, noun doubler, noun

Word Origin for double

C13: from Old French, from Latin duplus twofold, from duo two + -plus -fold

Idioms and Phrases with double back (1 of 2)

double back

Reverse one's course, go back the way one has come. For example, The officer lost the suspect, who had doubled back on him. This term, at first put simply as to double, is used largely to describe a way of evading pursuit. [Late 1500s]

Idioms and Phrases with double back (2 of 2)

double