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regress
verb
(intr) to return or revert, as to a former place, condition, or mode of behaviour
(tr) statistics to measure the extent to which (a dependent variable) is associated with one or more independent variables
noun
the act of regressing
movement in a backward direction; retrogression
logic a supposed explanation each stage of which requires to be similarly explained, as saying that knowledge requires a justification in terms of propositions themselves known to be true
Other Word Forms
- regressor noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of regress1
Example Sentences
Rachel Slaughter said her son will only receive six months of therapy this year and fears he will "regress" as a result.
“So the ability to play the infield, kick out to the outfield, and not be compromised by the ankle and not regress, that’s something we need.”
Audiences are clamoring for great theatrical comedies, but laughter shouldn’t come at the cost of progressiveness, especially in a moment when so much of the media is willfully regressing toward conservatism.
His “Naked Gun” doesn’t want to regress; it wants to surprise and surpass while never punching down.
Pointedly and inevitably, our leads regress into Mars-Venus caricatures — he’s the jerk, she’s the psycho — as Brooks vents her frustration that gender tropes haven’t evolved.
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