{i} person or thing which returns to a previous condition or belief; reversion, return of property to its owner after the occurrence of a particular event (Law)
noun, verb An extra element to add to a trick by continuing the motion of the trick until the board and skater are going backwards To clarify: to do a frontside air revert is to do a frontside air, land, and then to turn around, in the frontside direction, and go backwards towards the next wall The motion here completes a circle, all in the same direction Therefore, a backside ollie revert means to spin in the backside direction (clockwise for regular footers)
When people or things revert to a previous state, system, or type of behaviour, they go back to it. Jackson said her boss became increasingly depressed and reverted to smoking heavily
To throw away a file in the client workspace, replacing it with the revision in the depot that was being edited Files that were opened with p4 add are left in the client workspace; they are simply removed from the corresponding changelist Reverting files can only be done before the files have been submitted
{f} return to previous condition or belief; (about property) be returned to a former owner or his heirs (Law); return to an earlier form or type (Biology); return to a particular topic
If property, rights, or money revert to someone, they become that person's again after someone else has had them for a period of time. When the lease ends, the property reverts to the freeholder
To discard any changes made to an object since the last time the changes were committed or the object's storage was opened See also Commit and Transacted access mode
reverted
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rivırtîd
Telaffuz
/rēˈvərtəd/ /riːˈvɜrtɪd/
Etimoloji
[ ri-'v&rt ] (intransitive verb.) 15th century. Middle English, from Middle French revertir, from Latin revertere, v.t., to turn back and reverti, v.i., to return, come back, from re- + vertere, verti to turn; more at WORTH.