TOP

Definition of retract verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

retract

verb
 
/rɪˈtrækt/
 
/rɪˈtrækt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they retract
 
/rɪˈtrækt/
 
/rɪˈtrækt/
he / she / it retracts
 
/rɪˈtrækts/
 
/rɪˈtrækts/
past simple retracted
 
/rɪˈtræktɪd/
 
/rɪˈtræktɪd/
past participle retracted
 
/rɪˈtræktɪd/
 
/rɪˈtræktɪd/
-ing form retracting
 
/rɪˈtræktɪŋ/
 
/rɪˈtræktɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. [transitive] retract something (formal) to say that something you have said earlier is not true or correct or that you did not mean it
    • He made a false confession which he later retracted.
    • They tried to persuade me to retract my words.
    • to retract a claim/an allegation/a confession
  2. [transitive] retract something (formal) to refuse to keep an agreement, a promise, etc.
    • to retract an offer
    Topics Discussion and agreementc2
  3. [intransitive, transitive] (specialist) to move back into the main part of something; to pull something back into the main part of something
    • The animal retracted into its shell.
    • The undercarriage failed to retract.
    • retract something The undercarriage was fully retracted.
  4. Word Originlate Middle English: from Latin retract- ‘drawn back’, from the verb retrahere (from re- ‘back’ + trahere ‘drag’); the senses ‘withdraw (a statement)’ and ‘go back on’ via Old French from retractare ‘reconsider’ (based on trahere ‘drag’).
See retract in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
influence
verb
 
 
From the Word list
OPAL spoken words
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day