What is another word for retraces?

Pronunciation: [ɹɪtɹˈe͡ɪsɪz] (IPA)

Retracing is the act of exploring or traversing a path that one has previously taken. Synonyms for the word retraces would include retracking, revisiting, and reexamining. Additionally, re-traversing, reiterating, retraversing, and rechecking are other possible synonyms for retraces. Retracing one's steps can be a valuable exercise in remembering forgotten details or gaining further insight into a subject. Synonyms such as reengaging, re-exploring, and revising can help to express the importance and value of this process. Whether retracing one's steps through a physical location or revisiting a prior idea or decision, utilizing synonyms like retracking, revisiting, and reexamining can provide nuance and variation within your language choices.

What are the paraphrases for Retraces?

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What are the hypernyms for Retraces?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Retraces

A third story, called "Slaves," in a masterful way retraces the catastrophes of the now historical journey of January 9, 1905, at the end of which, a crowd of 200,000 men, led by the famous pope Gapon, went to the Tsar's palace to present their demands to him, and were received with cannon shots.
"Contemporary Russian Novelists"
Serge Persky
In "Peter and Alexis," he retraces Russian life in the beginning of the 18th century, when it was dominated by the extraordinary character of Peter the Great.
"Contemporary Russian Novelists"
Serge Persky
"Because the Pest has a habit every time she doubles of going three paces to the right; then she retraces her steps four, five, or six in the other direction, and jumps away into a clear place.
"The Man-Wolf and Other Tales"
Emile Erckmann and Alexandre Chatrian

Famous quotes with Retraces

  • It is almost as difficult to make a man unlearn his errors as his knowledge. Mal-information is more hopeless than non-information; for error is always more busy than ignorance. Ignorance is a blank sheet, on which we may write; but error is a scribbled one, on which we must first erase. Ignorance is contented to with her back to the truth; but error is more presumptuous, and in the direction. Ignorance has no light, but error follows a false one. The consequence is, that error, when she retraces her footsteps, has further to go, before she can arrive at the truth, than ignorance.
    Charles Caleb Colton
  • It may be in some measure due to the defects of notation in his time that Diophantos will have in his solutions no numbers whatever except numbers, in [the non-numbers of] which, in addition to surds and imaginary quantities, he includes quantities. ...Such equations then as lead to surd, imaginary, or negative roots he regards as useless for his purpose: the solution is in these cases , impossible. So we find him describing the equation 4=4+20 as because it would give =-4. Diophantos makes it throughout his object to obtain solutions in rational numbers, and we find him frequently giving, as a preliminary, conditions which must be satisfied, which are the conditions of a result rational in Diophantos' sense. In the great majority of cases when Diophantos arrives in the course of a solution at an equation which would give an irrational result he retraces his steps and finds out how his equation has arisen, and how he may by altering the previous work substitute for it another which shall give a rational result. This gives rise, in general, to a subsidiary problem the solution of which ensures a rational result for the problem itself. Though, however, Diophantos has no notation for a surd, and does not admit surd results, it is scarcely true to say that he makes no use of quadratic equations which lead to such results. Thus, for example, in v. 33 he solves such an equation so far as to be able to see to what integers the solution would approximate most nearly.
    Thomas Little Heath

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