regress

1 of 2

noun

re·​gress ˈrē-ˌgres How to pronounce regress (audio)
1
a
: an act or the privilege of going or coming back
2
: movement backward to a previous and especially worse or more primitive state or condition
3
: the act of reasoning backward

regress

2 of 2

verb

re·​gress ri-ˈgres How to pronounce regress (audio)
regressed; regressing; regresses

intransitive verb

1
a
: to make or undergo regress : retrograde
b
: to be subject to or exhibit regression
2
: to tend to approach or revert to a mean

transitive verb

: to induce a state of psychological regression in
regressor noun

Did you know?

As you might guess, regress is the opposite of progress. So if a disease regresses, that's generally a good thing, but in most other ways we prefer not to regress. If someone's mental state has been improving, we hope that person won't start to regress; and when a nation's promising educational system begins to regress, that's a bad sign for the country's future. Economists often distinguish between a progressive tax and a regressive tax; in a progressive tax, the percentage that goes to taxes gets larger as the amount of money being taxed gets larger, while in a regressive tax the percentage gets smaller.

Examples of regress in a Sentence

Verb The patient is regressing to a childlike state. in extreme circumstances, people sometimes regress to the behavior they exhibited in childhood
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Noun
When a crisis draws him back home to Baltimore, his world begins to collapse, expand, regress and explode all around him. Melanie Goodfellow, Deadline, 2 May 2025 From the days when enslaved people were legally forbidden from learning to read, to the fight for desegregation in Brown v. Board of Education, to the overturning of affirmative action, schools have both reflected and shaped racial progress and regress in America. Anne Tapp Jaksa, Baltimore Sun, 14 Apr. 2025
Verb
His scoring average fell from 15.6 points per game to 13.4, rebounding regressed from 14.7 boards to 11.6, blocks from 2.1 to 1.4 and field goal percentage from 71.3 to 65.9. Zach Harper, New York Times, 2 May 2025 Gilbert paints a clear and narrative odyssey of 21st-century feminism and how society has regressed toward the hyper-objectification, sexualization and infantilization of women. Clare Mulroy, USA Today, 1 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for regress

Word History

Etymology

Noun

Middle English regresse, from Anglo-French, from Latin regressus, from regredi to go back, from re- + gradi to go — more at grade entry 1

First Known Use

Noun

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Verb

circa 1522, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense 1a

Time Traveler
The first known use of regress was in the 15th century

Browse Nearby Words

Cite this Entry

“Regress.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/regress. Accessed 18 May. 2025.

Kids Definition

regress

verb
re·​gress
ri-ˈgres
: to go or cause to go back especially to a previous level or condition

Medical Definition

regress

intransitive verb
re·​gress ri-ˈgres How to pronounce regress (audio)
: to undergo or exhibit regression
a regressing lesion

transitive verb

: to induce a state of psychological regression in
regress a hypnotized subject

More from Merriam-Webster on regress

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