- PRE- Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of PRE- is earlier than : prior to : before How to use pre- in a sentence
- pre- - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Before; earlier in time; beforehand This prefix is usually prefixed to words without using a hyphen (for example, prefix, predate) A hyphen is used in the following cases:
- PRE- Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Pre- definition: a prefix occurring originally in loanwords from Latin, where it meant “before” (preclude; prevent ); applied freely as a prefix, with the meanings “prior to,” “in advance of,” “early,” “beforehand,” “before,” “in front of,” and with other figurative meanings (preschool; prewar; prepay; preoral
- Pre- - definition of pre- by The Free Dictionary
before in time, rank, order, position, etc: predate; pre-eminent; premeditation; prefrontal; preschool
- HTML pre tag - W3Schools
Definition and Usage The <pre> tag defines preformatted text Text in a <pre> element is displayed in a fixed-width font, and the text preserves both spaces and line breaks The text will be displayed exactly as written in the HTML source code Also look at:
- PRE- | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
before (a time or an event): precooked food a preexisting condition (Definition of pre- from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)
- pre- - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
pre-, prefix pre- comes from Latin, where it has the meaning "before, in front of,'' "prior to, in advance of,'' "being more than, surpassing'': pre- + -dict → predict (= say in advance of something);
- PRE- definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
Pre- is used to form words that indicate that something takes place before a particular date, period, or event his pre-war job pre-1971 cars life in pre-industrial England
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