Noun
The reverse, in contrast to the obverse.
(music) The B-side of a phonograph record.
Synonym: B-side
Antonym: A-side
Nice tune. What's on the flipside?
(informal) A necessary consequence or corollary of something that acts as a negation or counterbalance; especially one seen as opposite, or as pro versus con.
Walking to work is definitely healthier – on the flipside, though, it takes twice as long.
(informal) The occasion when we meet again (e.g. when I return from work, etc.; said on parting); later or tomorrow.
See you on the flipside!
But on the flipside, traditional MMOs are not as popular as they once were, while other kinds of online games, like battle royale shooters, have become the new dominant force in social gaming. Source: Internet
And the Official China has not given up its penchant to needle India’s economic flipside saying that India will take a decade to catch up with the Communist Dragon. Source: Internet
I didn’t get to do as much research about Seoul as I would have liked to before coming here, but on the flipside, I didn’t have any preconceptions about what to do or where to go, and ended up loving every moment. Source: Internet
On the flipside, adults fascinated with the macabre may be drawn into Riley Sager’s fictional account of surviving a serial killer, “The Final Girls” ($15-$26), or former Manson acolyte Dianne Lake’s memoir, “Member of the Family” ($18-$27). Source: Internet
In addition, a neglected flipside is that if Morsi had been left to nourish his pseudo-dictatorial tendencies, that would have also set a perhaps more dangerous precedent in a country where the spectre of dictatorship has still not gone away. Source: Internet
But on the flipside, we are all too often barely getting by, only just raising enough money to print each issue and with no funds to truly grow and improve the business. Source: Internet