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Well he could find it strange, but money is money and he takes the job. As the babysitter he makes up the rules and schedule as to how he does with his day, throwing in childish activities and punish him as see fit.
re·gress
verb
verb: regress; 3rd person present: regresses; past tense: regressed; past participle: regressed; gerund or present participle: regressing
rəˈɡres/
1.
return to a former or less developed state.
"art has been regressing toward adolescence for more than a generation now"
synonyms: revert, retrogress, relapse, lapse, backslide, slip back; More
deteriorate, decline, worsen, degenerate, get worse;
informalgo downhill
"he regressed to his former state of madness"
antonyms: progress
return mentally to a former stage of life or a supposed previous life, especially through hypnosis or mental illness.
"she claims to be able to regress to the Roman era"
2.
Statistics
calculate the coefficient or coefficients of regression of (a variable) against or on another variable.
3.
Astronomy
move in a retrograde direction.
1.
the action of returning to a former or less developed state.
2.
Philosophy
a series of statements in which a logical procedure is continually reapplied to its own result without approaching a useful conclusion (e.g., defining something in terms of itself).
Origin
late Middle English (as a noun): from Latin regressus, from regredi ‘go back, return,’ from re- ‘back’ + gradi ‘walk.’