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The occasional apparent backward movement of planets is evidence that they revolve around the sun.
Engage the lock to prevent backward rotation of the wheel.
(figuratively) Acting or moving oppositely to the desired direction of progress.
This is a backward step for the country.
Reversed in order or sequence.
This backward writing is hard to read.
(figuratively)Expressing lack of development or advancement.
Retarded in development; not as advanced as would be expected.
The child is backward in his school work.
1882, Charles Edward Page, How to feed the baby to make it healthy and happy, page 133:
The effect is to retard their progress—giving them too little opportunity and too little incentive for copying the language of adults— and a little later the child is pained and the parents' ears tingle at hearing a chance remark: “ How terribly backward she is about talking."
1910, Leonard Keene Hirshberg, What You Ought to Know about Your Baby, page 19:
The fact that a child is backward in talking is no sign of defective intelligence, nor does it prove that it will be a slow pupil.
1925, Louis Fischer, The Health-care of the Baby: A Handbook for Mothers and Nurses, page 170:
Rickety children are backward in teething, and when the teeth do appear, they decay very rapidly. The children are backward in walking and backward in talking and the soft-spot (fontanel) on the top of the head remains open months longer than it should.
2006, Tom Donnelly, “Back to Mogadishu?”, in Armed Forces Journal, archived from the original on 8 January 2009:
Most cruelly, the immediate security interests of the United States and the states surrounding Somalia are now to keep it a failed state, to prevent Islamists from consolidating even a weak state centered on Mogadishu. The leader of the victorious faction, one Aden Hashi 'Ayro, is said to be a veteran of Afghanistan; he knows well what a small sanctuary in a backward corner of the globe can mean for al Qaeda.
Slow to apprehend; having difficulties in learning.
a backward child
Lacking progressive or enlightened thought; outdated.
"[…] I've a job of work to finish tonight; mourning, as must be in time for the funeral to-morrow; and grandfather has been out moss- hunting, and will not be home till late." "Oh, how charming it will be! I'll help you if you're backward. Have you much to do?"
1855, The zoologist: a popular miscellany of natural history, Volume 14:
We have had a long run of heavy, wet and squally weather; the dry season is two months backward, and the Lepidoptera have not appeared so abundantly as they should have done.
1925, Louis Fischer, The Health-care of the Baby: A Handbook for Mothers and Nurses, page 170:
Rickety children are backward in teething, and when the teeth do appear, they decay very rapidly.
Then her eyes, always alert for the affairs of her kitchen, fell on some action of the Chinese cook which aroused her violent disapproval. She turned on him with a torrent of abuse. The Chink was not backward to defend himself, and a very lively quarrel ensued.
2003 August, “Media Prospecting”, in Mortgage Magazine, archived from the original on 20 August 2006:
Don’t be backward in suggesting story ideas to local media but always think of the wants, needs and desires of their readers when selling-in story ideas.
(chess) Of a pawn, further behind than pawns of the same colour on adjacentfiles and unable to be moved forward safely.
The soul forgets her schemes of Hope and Pride, / and flies unconscious o'er each backward year.
Usage notes
Backwards is possible as a synonym for most senses, both adjectival and adverbial.
Strictly speaking, in British English backward is an adjective and backwards is an adverb:
It was a backward move vs He moved backwards
In American English, the rule may be reversed, and in written American English, backward is more common for the adverb. This follows the same usage for similar words ending in -ward/-wards and -way/-ways. See also -wise.
Only the -ward forms are commonly used in combination with an adjective, e.g.:
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
It was still possible — perhaps it might be inevitable — for him to accept frankly the altered conditions, and avow Baldassarre's existence; but hardly without casting an unpleasant light backward on his original reticence[…]
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.