recede implies a gradual withdrawing from a forward or high fixed point in time or space.
the flood waters gradually receded
retreat implies withdrawal from a point or position reached.
retreating soldiers
retract implies drawing back from an extended position.
a cat retracting its claws
back is used with up, down, out, or off to refer to any retrograde motion.
backed off on the throttle
Examples of recede in a Sentence
Verb (1)
the sound of sirens receded as the fire engines roared off into the distance
after the rain stops, the floodwaters should gradually recede
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Verb
Analysts also say ship captains may take their time to decide whether passage is safe and that the threat of attack from Iran has truly receded.—David McHugh, Los Angeles Times, 15 June 2026 Brantley argues that this history challenges the conventional view of the decade as a period when leftist activism receded and conservative politics prevailed.—H.m.a. Leow, JSTOR Daily, 12 June 2026 On June 6, a man with a slightly receding hairline walked into a beachside tattoo stand in Chennai, India, showed the proprietor a message on a phone screen, and, with video recording the whole process, settled in to get a line of text apparently tattooed across his forehead.—T.m. Brown, CNN Money, 12 June 2026 Good habits on offense receded, and the Knicks found their rhythm.—Joe Vardon, New York Times, 12 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for recede
Word History
Etymology
Verb (1)
Middle English, from Latin recedere to go back, from re- + cedere to go