2[intransitiveI, transitiveT]BACK/BACKWARDS if you recline a seat, or if it reclines, you lower the back of the seat so that you can lean back in it (使)〔椅背〕向后靠
recline in/on• A number of the pictures place the model in the traditionalposereclining on a bed or sofa.• For nova-hunting, Alcock uses hand-held binoculars which he can sweep freely over the sky as he reclines in a deckchair.• At eighty-two, Margarett, reclining on a hospital bed in an apartment high above Boston, told me the story.• Davis was reclining in an easy chair.• Seder participants recline on pillows, for example, because they had no such luxury as slaves, the children said.• Sighing like an old Negro cotton-picker, I reclined on the bed and smoked a cigarette.• Lindsey found herself gazing with fascination at the figurereclining in the bed.
reclining seat/chair• An entrepreneur had left a bigcorporate job and bought a small company that manufacturesreclining chairs.• Hastily Stevens laid down his book on Third World debt and straightened his reclining chair.• All the coaches have air-conditioning, reclining seats and tintedwindows.• A new chaise longue and reclining chair have been added to the light shapely chairs already in production.• NorthSeaFerriesinclude 5 coursedinner and reclining seat in all prices.• Hours later he lay in his reclining chair, lulled by a gin and tonic, by Debussy on the radio.• My thumbpress ing on the reclining seat on the plane, head back-gin and tonic in front of me.• Our coaches are luxurious, offering plenty of space, reclining seats, toilet and many other features.
Originrecline
(1400-1500)Old Frenchrecliner, from Latinreclinare, from clinare“to bend”