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behindhand

adverb

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L186623 on Wikidata ↗

adjective

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L334802 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

adj

Etymology: From behind + hand.

  1. Late, tardy, overdue, behind (in accomplishing a task, etc.).

    These days before the examinations began were very difficult for everybody, and Perrin began that hideous “getting behind-hand” that made things accumulate so that there seemed no chance of ever catching up.

  2. Not at the expected point of completion.

    It was now the season for planting and sowing; many gardens and allotments of the villagers had already received their spring tillage; but the garden and the allotment of the Durbeyfields were behindhand.

    It was churning day, and there was baking to be done, and the mending was behindhand, and the children needed clothes […]

  3. Behind (someone or something moving, a trend, etc.), lagging behind, not keeping up.

    I have constantly observed, that the generality of people are fifty years, at least, behind-hand in their politicks.

    [The public] is so in awe of its own opinion, that it never dares to form any, but catches up the first idle rumour, lest it should be behind-hand in its judgment, and echoes it till it is deafened with the sound of its own voice.

  4. Behind in paying a debt; in arrears.

    Leo. ... theſe thy offices (So rarely kind) are as Interpreters Of my behind-hand ſlackneſſe.

    He’s sadly behindhand with his rent, as I was saying, but if he’s really ill, I must see after Sheepshanks, who is a hardish man of business.

  5. Not having enough of, lacking (in something).

    1777, Samuel Johnson, Letter to James Boswell dated 25 November, 1777, cited in James Boswell, The Life of Samuel Johnson, London: Charles Dilly, 1791, Volume 2, p. 178, […] I have had for some time a very difficult and laborious respiration, but I am better by purges, abstinence, and other methods. I am yet however much behind-hand in my health and rest.

  6. Inferior, less advanced (compared with someone in something).

    […] I’ll shew you I scorn to be behind-hand in Civility with you; and as you are not angry for what I have said, so I am not angry for what you have said.

    He had enough of that faculty of small talk to be sufficiently eloquent upon insignificant topics; he could point a compliment, or envelope a double meaning with all the readiness of a practitioner in that commodious art, and indeed he was not behindhand with any man of modern honour in the true principles of the sect […]

adv

Etymology: From behind + hand.

  1. Belatedly, tardily.
  2. In debt, or in arrears.