From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishrewindre‧wind /riːˈwaɪnd/ verb (past tense and past participle rewound /-ˈwaʊnd/) [transitive] TCRto make a cassette tape or video go backwards in order to see or hear it again → fast forward→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
rewind• Before the end of it, we rewind and just wait.• A part of me wanted to stop and hit rewind, but it was too late.• The men met each day at noon in the observatory to check the watch against the regulator clock and then rewind it.• Just rewind that, would you.• Guiltily realizing that she hadn't finished yet, Jezrael leaped just in time to rewind the cuber.• In the world of video rental stores, there is no sin as egregious as failing to rewind the video.• They got 38 minutes of playing time before a rewind was needed.