| • | To turn back; to go or come again to the same place or condition. | 
 | • | To come back, or begin again, after an interval, regular or irregular; to appear again. | 
 | • | To speak in answer; to reply; to respond. | 
 | • | To revert; to pass back into possession. | 
 | • | To go back in thought, narration, or argument. | 
 | • | To bring, carry, send, or turn, back; as, to return a borrowed book, or a hired horse. | 
 | • | To repay; as, to return borrowed money. | 
 | • | To give in requital or recompense; to requite. | 
 | • | To give back in reply; as, to return an answer; to return thanks. | 
 | • | To retort; to throw back; as, to return the lie. | 
 | • | To report, or bring back and make known. | 
 | • | To render, as an account, usually an official account, to a superior; to report officially by a list or statement; as, to return a list of stores, of killed or wounded; to return the result of an election. | 
 | • | Hence, to elect according to the official report of the election officers. | 
 | • | To bring or send back to a tribunal, or to an office, with a certificate of what has been done; as, to return a writ. | 
 | • | To convey into official custody, or to a general depository. | 
 | • | To bat (the ball) back over the net. | 
 | • | To lead in response to the lead of one's partner; as, to return a trump; to return a diamond for a club. | 
 | • | The act of returning (intransitive), or coming back to the same place or condition; as, the return of one long absent; the return of health; the return of the seasons, or of an anniversary. | 
 | • | The act of returning (transitive), or sending back to the same place or condition; restitution; repayment; requital; retribution; as, the return of anything borrowed, as a book or money; a good return in tennis. | 
 | • | That which is returned. | 
 | • | A payment; a remittance; a requital. | 
 | • | An answer; as, a return to one's question. | 
 | • | An account, or formal report, of an action performed, of a duty discharged, of facts or statistics, and the like; as, election returns; a return of the amount of goods produced or sold; especially, in the plural, a set of tabulated statistics prepared for general information. | 
 | • | The profit on, or advantage received from, labor, or an investment, undertaking, adventure, etc. | 
 | • | The continuation in a different direction, most often at a right angle, of a building, face of a building, or any member, as a molding or mold; -- applied to the shorter in contradistinction to the longer; thus, a facade of sixty feet east and west has a return of twenty feet north and south. | 
 | • | The rendering back or delivery of writ, precept, or execution, to the proper officer or court. | 
 | • | The certificate of an officer stating what he has done in execution of a writ, precept, etc., indorsed on the document. | 
 | • | The sending back of a commission with the certificate of the commissioners. | 
 | • | A day in bank. See Return day, below. | 
 | • | An official account, report, or statement, rendered to the commander or other superior officer; as, the return of men fit for duty; the return of the number of the sick; the return of provisions, etc. | 
 | • | The turnings and windings of a trench or mine. |