pullback

The act or result of pulling back; a withdrawal.

Noun

  1. The act or result of pulling back; a withdrawal.
  2. The act of drawing a camera back to broaden the visible scene.
  3. Something that holds back; a drawback; a hindrance.
    • Your disorders are a pull-back for your good qualities. - 1710 October 31 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Jonathan Swift, “[Dr. Swift’s Journal to Stella.] (please specify |letter=I–LXV).”, in Thomas Sheridan, John...
  4. A reduction in the price of a financial instrument after reaching a peak
  5. An attacking pass from the wing into a position further from the attacking goal line.
    • The Reds carved the first opening of the second period as Glen Johnson's pull-back found David Ngog but the Frenchman hooked wide from six yards. - 2010 December 29, Sam Sheringham, “Liverpool 0 - 1 Wolverhampton”, in...
  6. A device for making a woman's gown hang close and straight in front.
  7. The map between cotangent bundles of manifolds corresponding to a smooth map between smooth manifolds, which at each point is the dual map to the corresponding pushforward.
  8. The limit of a cospan: a Cartesian square or “pullback square”.

    Synonyms: fiber product fibre product Cartesian square pullback square

    Hyponyms: equalizer equaliser

  9. Within a Cartesian square (which has a pair of divergent morphisms and a pair of convergent morphisms) the divergent morphism which is directly opposite to a given one of the convergent morphisms, said to be “along” the convergent morphism which is between that pair of opposite morphisms. (The pullback is said to be “of” the given morphism.)
  10. A move in tap dance involving a backward jump landing on the balls of the feet.

Origin

Etymology tree English pull backdeverb. English pullback Deverbal from pull back.

Forms

pullbacks pull-back

Related

pushforward pushout