Revert in a sentence as a verb

If this becomes common, forms will revert to being less trusted.

The revert had nothing to do with grammar and language.

There is far to much money at stake now to revert things - money = lobbying.

There was a ton of pressure on me to make it work or admit defeat and revert.

For example, "git checkout foo" might mean go to the foo branch, or might mean revert a file called "foo".

The normal way of things when I was wasting time at WP was, edit, revert, talk page, re-post copy.

Had to revert to the older version, mostly due to the way on-screen-display changed.

Defaulting the easy revert option to unchecked is the perfect kicker.

You can write code for hours each day and do nothing but revert to the technologies and techniques that you find most comfortable.

I hope this revert represents a natural continuation of that policy.

All it does is make the "bad" behavior the default, but give you the option to revert it if the original file exists somewhere on disk?

They need to get along well enough not to clash over personal matters -- but not so well that they simply agree with one another and revert into groupthink.

You can put a custom title, it's just that HN's all-knowing, anonymous moderators will almost invariably revert it to match whatever's on the page.

Surprised no one has pointed out the worst of Brooks' warped logic: > If federal security agencies cant do vast data sweeps, they will inevitably > revert to the older, more intrusive eavesdropping methods.

You could theoretically invest awesome points into making schools give positive marginal returns to awesome points, but they'll generally revert to goals they consider more important, like making sure many students graduate mostly literate and providing secure well-paying jobs to politically influential constituents.

Revert definitions

verb

go back to a previous state; "We reverted to the old rules"

See also: return retrovert regress

verb

undergo reversion, as in a mutation