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- nounrecess (noun) · recesses (plural noun)
- a small space created by building part of a wall further back from the rest:"a table set into a recess"
- a period of time when the proceedings of a parliament, committee, court of law, or other official body are temporarily suspended:"talks resumed after a month's recess" · "the Senate was in recess"
verbrecess (verb) · recesses (third person present) · recessed (past tense) · recessed (past participle) · recessing (present participle)- attach (a fixture) by setting it back into the wall or surface to which it is fixed:"the lights are going to be recessed into the ceiling"
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISH(of formal proceedings) be temporarily suspended:"the talks recessed at 2:15"Similar:be suspendedsuspend proceedingstake a break
- suspend (such proceedings) temporarily:"the trial was recessed for the weekend"Similar:hold in abeyancebring to an endcall a halt tosuspend proceedingstake a breaklay on the tabletake a recess
- (of an official body) suspend its proceedings for a period of time:"Parliament recessed for the summer on Tuesday"Similar:suspend proceedingstake a recesstake a break
Originmid 16th century (in the sense ‘withdrawal, departure’): from Latin recessus, from recedere ‘go back’ (see recede). The verb dates from the early 19th century. Explore further
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