Retract
Retract (from the Latin retractare, "to draw back") is a verb that means to shrink, make shorter, or pull back. It can be used in a variety of contexts, including anatomy, mechanics, and communication, to describe the action of withdrawal or reversal.
In Anatomy and Biology
In a biological or anatomical context, retract refers to the movement of a body part in a posterior direction (pulling back). This action is performed by muscles known as retractors. The opposite of retraction is protraction, which is the movement of a body part in an anterior direction (pushing forward).
Common examples of retraction in the human body include:
- Scapular Retraction: The movement of the shoulder blades (scapulae) toward the spine. This action is performed by muscles such as the rhomboids and the middle fibers of the trapezius. It is the opposite of protraction, which occurs when rounding the shoulders forward.
- Mandibular Retraction: The pulling back of the lower jaw (mandible). This is a less common movement than protrusion (jutting the jaw forward).
- Tongue Retraction: Pulling the tongue back into the oral cavity.
Certain animals have specialized body parts capable of retraction for protection or hunting, such as a cat's claws or a snail's eyes and tentacles.
In Mechanics and Engineering
In mechanical engineering, retract describes the action of withdrawing a component to a stowed or non-extended position. This is a common function in many devices and systems, designed for safety, aerodynamics, or storage.
Examples include:
- Aircraft Landing Gear: After takeoff, the landing gear of an airplane is retracted into the fuselage or wings to reduce drag.
- Retractable Roofs: Found on some stadiums and cars (convertibles), allowing the roof to be pulled back and stowed away.
- Utility Knives: Many utility knives feature a retractable blade that can be pulled back into the handle for safety.
- Measuring Tapes: The tape measure retracts into its housing when a button is pressed or a crank is turned.
In Communication and Academia
In the context of communication, to retract a statement is to formally withdraw it, acknowledging that it was incorrect, unfounded, or should not have been said. This is a public act of taking back a previous assertion.
- Public Statements: A public figure, company, or media outlet might retract a statement that was factually inaccurate, misleading, or offensive.
- Academic and Scientific Retraction: In academic publishing, a retraction is the removal of a published paper from the scientific literature. This is a serious measure taken when the findings are proven to be unreliable due to scientific misconduct (such as data fabrication), plagiarism, or major methodological flaws that invalidate the conclusions. A retraction notice is typically published to inform the academic community of the paper's invalidity.
In General Usage
More generally, "retract" can be used to describe the act of pulling back anything that was previously put forward:
- Retracting an Offer: To withdraw a job offer or a proposal that was made to someone.
- Retracting a Promise: To take back a promise, indicating it will no longer be fulfilled.
In all its uses, the core concept of "retract" remains consistent: a movement of drawing something back from a forward, extended, or asserted position.