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Background   /bˈækgrˌaʊnd/   Listen
noun
background  n.  
1.
Ground in the rear or behind, or in the distance, as opposed to the foreground, or the ground in front.
2.
(Paint.) The space which is behind and subordinate to a portrait or group of figures. Note: The distance in a picture is usually divided into foreground, middle distance, and background.
3.
Anything behind, serving as a foil; as, the statue had a background of red hangings.
4.
A place in obscurity or retirement, or out of sight. "I fancy there was a background of grinding and waiting before Miss Torry could produce this highly finished... performance." "A husband somewhere in the background."
5.
The set of conditions within which an action takes place, including the social and physical conditions as well as the psychological states of the participants; as, within the background of the massive budget deficits of the 1980's, new spending programs had little chance of passage by the congress.
6.
The set of conditions that precede and affect an action, such as the social and historical precedents for the event, as well as the general background (5); as, against the background of their expulsion by the Serbs, the desire of Kosovars for vengeance is understandable though regrettable.
7.
(Science) The signals that may be detected by a measurement which are not due to the phenomenon being studied, and tend to make the measurement uncertain to a greater or lesser degree. Specifically: (Physics) Electronic noise present in a system using electronic measuring instrument or in a telecommunications system, which may hide and which must be differentiated from the desired signal; also called background noise or noise.
8.
(Journalism) An agreement between a journalist and an interviewee that the name of the interviewee will not be quoted in any publication, although the substance of the remarks may be reported; often used in the phrase "on background". Compare deep background.
To place in the background, to make of little consequence.
To keep in the background, to remain unobtrusive, inconspicuous or out of sight; of people.
deep background, (Journalism) the status of an interview which must not be quoted in a publication, even without attribution. Compare background (8).






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Background" Quotes from Famous Books



... Boy, who is a little older (and already knows enough to place the responsibility for intrusion on his sister with her innocent eyes and imperturbable calm and golden hair), stood a little in the background, pretending to be engrossed with a magnet, as though he were unaware that he was really present. Curls hopped about on one leg frankly, knowing that the others would be blamed for any naughtiness of hers. Her radiant impudence never needs ...
— Old Junk • H. M. Tomlinson

... and were glistening in purity from their feet to their white beards. Still higher, in the scenes of the tympanum, the outlines of the little saints of the arches were designed most clearly on a dark background, and this magic sect continued until the final rapture at the marriage of Agnes, which the archangels appeared to be celebrating under a shower of white roses. Standing upon her pillar, with her white branch of palm and her white lamp, ...
— The Dream • Emile Zola

... its situation, the small city of Antibes is at once a type of the old regime and of the new. Lying on the sea, with a background of snow-capped mountains, it has not entirely escaped the fate of Nice; neither has it yet lost all its old Provencal characteristics. It is a pathetic compromise between the quaint reality of the old and ...
— Cathedrals and Cloisters of the South of France, Volume 1 • Elise Whitlock Rose

... upon which they could re-appear in the arena of National politics. It had been suggested to them from friendly sources that while the memory of their part in the bloody strife was still so fresh it would be prudent for them to remain in the background, but they vigorously resented this proposed exclusion. General Forrest of Tennessee published an indignant letter, in which he referred to "the counsel of timid men" that those who had prominently borne the ...
— Twenty Years of Congress, Volume 2 (of 2) • James Gillespie Blaine

... pretty picture framed in the doorway. She wore her riding-habit of olive-green—from the hem of which peeped her soft boots. Her hat, broad, picturesque, typical of the Southwest, had slipped backward, forming a background for her pretty face. An amused smile played about ...
— The Round-up - A Romance of Arizona novelized from Edmund Day's melodrama • John Murray and Marion Mills Miller


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