drawing+back
101retreating — re·treat || rɪ trɪËt n. withdrawal, act of drawing back; sanctuary, refuge, haven; period of seclusion for study or prayer v. draw back, withdraw, pull back, depart …
102retreats — re·treat || rɪ trɪËt n. withdrawal, act of drawing back; sanctuary, refuge, haven; period of seclusion for study or prayer v. draw back, withdraw, pull back, depart …
103recoil — vb 1 Recoil, shrink, flinch, wince, blench, quail can all mean to draw back from something, usually through fear, faintheartedness, or disgust. Recoil more than any of the succeeding terms suggests the physical signs of such drawing back or the… …
104Slava Raškaj — (January 2 1877, Ozalj, Croatia mdash; March 29, 1906, Zagreb) was an artist considered to be one of the first great Croatian watercolourists.Early yearsSlava was born in the family of the local administrator Vjekoslav Raškaj and his wife Olga,… …
105singing — ▪ music the production of musical tones by means of the human voice. It is the oldest form of music making. In its physical aspect, singing has a well defined technique that depends on the use of the lungs, which act as an air supply, or… …
106revulsion — re·vul·sion || rɪ vÊŒlʃn n. disgust, repugnance; sudden change in feeling toward a particular subject; withdrawal, act of drawing back; act of drawing blood from one area to another through counterirritation (Medicine) …
107revulsions — re·vul·sion || rɪ vÊŒlʃn n. disgust, repugnance; sudden change in feeling toward a particular subject; withdrawal, act of drawing back; act of drawing blood from one area to another through counterirritation (Medicine) …
108un|shrink´ing|ly — un|shrink|ing «uhn SHRIHNG kihng», adjective. not shrinking: a) not drawing up or contracting. b) not drawing back or recoiling; unflinching; firm. –un|shrink´ing|ly, adverb …
109un|shrink|ing — «uhn SHRIHNG kihng», adjective. not shrinking: a) not drawing up or contracting. b) not drawing back or recoiling; unflinching; firm. –un|shrink´ing|ly, adverb …
110scrape — I. verb (scraped; scraping) Etymology: Middle English, from Old Norse skrapa; akin to Old English scrapian to scrape, Latin scrobis ditch, Russian skresti to scrape Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. a. to remove from a surface by usually… …