Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun The receding or outgoing tide, occurring between the time when the tide is highest and the time when the following tide is lowest.
  • noun A period of decline or diminution.
  • intransitive verb To fall back from the flood stage.
  • intransitive verb To fall away or back; decline or recede. synonym: recede.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun The reflux or falling of the tide; the return of tide-water toward the sea: opposed to flood or flow. See tide.
  • noun A flowing backward or away; decline; decay; a gradual falling off or diminution: as, the ebb of prosperity; crime is on the ebb.
  • noun A name of the common bunting, Emberiza miliaria. Montagu.
  • Not deep; shallow.
  • To flow back; return, as the water of a tide, toward the ocean; subside: opposed to flow: as, the tide ebbs and flows twice in twenty-four hours. See tide.
  • To return or recede; fall away; decline.
  • Synonyms To recede, retire, decrease, sink, lower, wane, fall away.
  • To cause to subside.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun (Zoöl.) The European bunting.
  • noun The reflux or flowing back of the tide; the return of the tidal wave toward the sea; -- opposed to flood.
  • noun The state or time of passing away; a falling from a better to a worse state; low state or condition; decline; decay.
  • noun the alternate ebb and flood of the tide; often used figuratively.
  • transitive verb obsolete To cause to flow back.
  • intransitive verb To flow back; to return, as the water of a tide toward the ocean; -- opposed to flow.
  • intransitive verb To return or fall back from a better to a worse state; to decline; to decay; to recede.
  • adjective Receding; going out; falling; shallow; low.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun The receding movement of the tide.
  • noun A gradual decline
  • noun low state, state of depression
  • noun The European bunting
  • verb to flow back or recede
  • verb to fall away or decline
  • verb to fish with stakes and nets that serve to prevent the fish from getting back into the sea with the ebb
  • adjective low, shallow

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun the outward flow of the tide
  • verb flow back or recede
  • noun a gradual decline (in size or strength or power or number)
  • verb fall away or decline
  • verb hem in fish with stakes and nets so as to prevent them from going back into the sea with the ebb

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Middle English ebbe, from Old English ebba; see apo- in Indo-European roots.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English ebbe, from Old English ebba ("ebb, tide"), from Proto-Germanic *abjô, *abjōn (compare West Frisian ebbe, Dutch eb, German Ebbe, Old Norse efja ("countercurrent"), from Proto-Germanic *ab (“off, away”), from Proto-Indo-European *apó. (compare Old English af). More at of, off.

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Examples

  • But I also hear what you say about blogging having a certain ebb-and-flow energy to it.

    The Honest Scrap Meme « Tales from the Reading Room 2009

  • This point, or ebb, is called the uncanny valley - see the chart below.

    Archive 2008-12-01 zombietron 2008

  • This point, or ebb, is called the uncanny valley - see the chart below.

    The distant future, the year 2000 zombietron 2008

  • My appreciation for Joe Biden has been subject to a certain ebb and flow over the years.

    Archive 2004-10-01 2004

  • My appreciation for Joe Biden has been subject to a certain ebb and flow over the years.

    Panic is passe... 2004

  • My appreciation for Joe Biden has been subject to a certain ebb and flow over the years.

    Quote of the Day 2004

  • My appreciation for Joe Biden has been subject to a certain ebb and flow over the years.

    Sic 'em, John! 2004

  • During that period, which dates from the founding of the journal Annales in 1929, a succession of eminent French scholars taught the history profession to turn its back on politics and to contemplate the long-term ebb and flow of currents running deep beneath the frothy stuff of battles and elections.

    Revolution sans Revolutionaries Darnton, Robert 1985

  • "What made you try the South Channel in ebb tide and an inshore wind?"

    Spice and the Devil's Cave 1930

  • "It is vat you call ebb," said the French captain.

    Marmaduke Merry A Tale of Naval Adventures in Bygone Days William Henry Giles Kingston 1847

Comments

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  • 'I get the impression that all it does is ebb, rather than flow'

    —interviewee who thought they were being complimentary about a firm, but who will get out bottoms sued off if I don't swap them round before it goes to print.

    July 8, 2009