See also: turn back

English

edit

Etymology

edit

Deverbal from turn back.

Noun

edit

turnback (countable and uncountable, plural turnbacks)

  1. (attributive) Part of a garment that is turned back.
  2. The act of turning back a boat containing immigrants.
    Coordinate term: turnaway
    • 2015 July 20, Paul Farrell, “Details about asylum seeker turnbacks to remain secret, commissioner rules”, in The Guardian[1]:
      The information commissioner, Professor John McMillan, ruled that requests for watch officer logs and authorisations for turnbacks were exempt from release because they could have a “substantial adverse effect” on the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service (ACBPS).
  3. The strap from the hames to the hip-strap, on a horse.
  4. A place, e.g. on a railway, where vehicles can reverse direction, i.e. turn back.
    • 2023 June 14, David Clough, “Tram-trains are making tracks...”, in RAIL, number 985, page 54:
      Removal of one set of train turnbacks also makes more efficient use of infrastructure and reduces peak loads at interchange stations.
  5. (US) A cadet at a military academy who fails a class and has to retake it.

References

edit