Word
Of
The
Day
retrospective
retrospective \reh-truh-SPEK-tiv\
adjective
Retrospective describes something that relates to the past or to something that happened in the past.
// The museum has curated a
retrospective exhibit of the artist's early works.
See the entry >
Examples:
"Our
retrospective sense of time hinges on memory: Periods rich in novel, significant experiences feel longer, while routine collapses duration ..." — Marc Wittmann,
Psychology Today, 16 Nov. 2025
Did you know?
At the year's end, both introspection and retrospection are common. While
introspection involves looking inward and taking stock of oneself,
retrospection is all about recollecting and contemplating things that happened in the past. A look back at the history of the related adjective
retrospective reveals that it retains a strong connection to its past: its Latin source is
retrospicere, meaning "to look back at."
Retrospective can also be used
as a noun referring to an exhibition that "looks back" at an artist's work created over a span of years. Once you have
retrospective and
retrospection behind you, you can also add their kin
retrospect (most familiar in the phrase
in retrospect to describe thinking about the past or something that happened in the past) and
retro (usually meaning "fashionably nostalgic or old-fashioned") to your vocabulary, too.