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      • to get lower in value, amount, or number: Opposition to privatisation and foreign investment is receding in response to the shock of recession. Although oil prices receded somewhat in June, they rose again this week. (Definition of recede from the Cambridge Business English Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
      dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/recede
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  2. RECEDE definition: 1. to move further away into the distance, or to become less clear or less bright: 2. to move…. Learn more.

  3. RECEDE meaning: 1. to move further away into the distance, or to become less clear or less bright: 2. to move…. Learn more.

  4. From Longman Business Dictionary re‧cede /rɪˈsiːd/ verb [ intransitive] if prices, interest rates etc recede, they decrease Growth was expected to recede throughout the year. The domestic market is receding. → See Verb table Origin recede (1400-1500) Latin recedere, from cedere “to go”.

  5. 1. to go or move away; retreat; go to or toward a more distant point; withdraw. 2. to become more distant. 3. (of a color, form, etc., on a flat surface) to move away or be perceived as moving away from an observer, esp. as giving the illusion of space. Compare advance (sense 15) 4. to slope backward.

  6. The meaning of RECEDE is to move back or away : withdraw. How to use recede in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Recede.

  7. Recede definition: to go or move away; retreat; go to or toward a more distant point; withdraw.. See examples of RECEDE used in a sentence.

  8. 1. If something recedes from you, it moves away. [...] 2. When something such as a quality, problem, or illness recedes, it becomes weaker, smaller, or less intense. [...] 3. If someone's hair starts to recede, it no longer grows on the front of their head. [...] More. Conjugations of 'recede' present simple: I recede, you recede [...]

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