pull back
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English
[edit]Verb
[edit]pull back (third-person singular simple present pulls back, present participle pulling back, simple past and past participle pulled back)
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see pull, back.
- 1994, Linda Winstead, Guardian Angel:
- Her nightgown was thin, and she felt chilly as she stepped across the hall, pulling back the curtain that shielded Gabriel's room.
- 2002, Dennis J. Barton, Cola Wars:
- What's more, I pull back the sheets to take a quick but suspicious gander at Bunny, and she's wearing a pair of my briefs.
- 2006, Ruth K. Westheimer, Pierre A. Lehu, Sex for Dummies:
- An uncircumcised man should always take special precautions when bathing to pull back the foreskin and clean carefully around the glans.
- To retreat.
- 2010, Africasia, Birao is a garrison town near the border with Chad and Sudan:
- Central African armed forces (FACA) troops were forced to pull back from the town and were planning an operation to retake it, the source said.
- (transitive, sports) To pass (the ball) into a position further from the attacking goal line.
- December 1 2010, Paul Fletcher, BBC News, Ipswich 1-0 West Brom
- Jason Scotland should have scored after Tamas advanced purposefully down the right before pulling the ball back into the path of his team-mate, who shot straight at Myhill.
- December 1 2010, Paul Fletcher, BBC News, Ipswich 1-0 West Brom
- (transitive, sports) To score when the team is losing.
- Feb 19 2007, Al-Jazeera, Stylish Sevilla pull level with faltering Barcelona
- Ronaldinho pulled back a goal for Barca in injury time with a classy free-kick, but it was clearly too little too late to prevent their third Liga defeat.
- Feb 19 2007, Al-Jazeera, Stylish Sevilla pull level with faltering Barcelona