Retrace in a sentence as a verb

Don't be surprised to see a double top on the markets and then a sharp retrace afterward.

>"Don't be surprised to see a double top on the markets and then a sharp retrace afterward.

To recall the data, all you have to do is retrace your steps and remind yourself what each image means.

So anytime there is outrage, the offending party would retrace their steps.

As a control experiment, I do the same test on an old CRT display with a 170hz vertical retrace.

Probably you can retrace your steps and figure out where you set them down while you were on the phone, or maybe they fell into the couch.

But I can't count the number of times I've had to retrace this methodically with when talking about systems with very smart people.

We're likely to hear more and more of this over the next few decades as workers in China retrace the steps of the labour movement in the west.

It's very frustrating, especially in Twitter where you can get rather deep to suddenly not be able to retrace your steps.

Even if it didn't have a pre-generated map of the structure loaded... it could build a map as it went, and at least be able to provide a 'retrace my steps' view.

In the Litvinenko case, police were literally able to retrace the steps of the assassins by following the radiation.

Even if you added network latency, time for one frame network throughput and client display hardware retrace period, you'd still typically end up with a figure well under 50ms.

That breaks way outside the sandbox of a framebuffer, with signal being displayed in overscan areas, and during the normally-blank retrace interval resulting in ghosting effects.

Combining this technique with spaced repetition, you can commit thousands of pieces of data to a memory palace, wait a few hours to retrace your steps to recall the information, retrace your steps again the next day, then again a few days later, then again a week later, then a month later, etc.

Retrace definitions

verb

to go back over again; "we retraced the route we took last summer"; "trace your path"

See also: trace

verb

reassemble mentally; "reconstruct the events of 20 years ago"

See also: reconstruct construct