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prelacy
prelapsarian
prelate
prelature
prelibation
prelim
preliminary
preliterate
prelude
prem
premalignant
premarital
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premaxilla
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premedical
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prelude

prel·ude [ prél yd, práy ld ]


noun  (plural prel·udes)
Definition:
 
1. music introductory piece of music: a piece of music that introduces or precedes another one

2. music free-standing piece of music: a short musical composition, often one for piano, and often forming part of a set of such works

3. introductory event or occurrence: an event or action that introduces or precedes something else, especially something longer and more important



verb  (past and past participle prel·ud·ed, present participle prel·ud·ing, 3rd person present singular prel·udes)
Definition:
 
1. transitive and intransitive verb act as prelude to something: to act as an introduction to something else, especially something that is longer and more important

2. transitive verb introduce something with prelude: to precede something, especially a piece of music, with a prelude

[Mid-16th century. Directly or via French prélude< medieval Latin praeludium< Latin praeludere "play before" < ludere "play"]

prel·ud·er noun
pre·lu·di·al [ prə ldee əl ] adjective
pre·lu·sive [ prə lssiv ] adjective
pre·lu·sive·ly adverb
pre·lu·so·ri·ly adverb
pre·lu·so·ry adjective

Cultural Note

The Prelude, a poem (1805) by British writer William Wordsworth. Planned as a preface to a never-completed philosophical poem called The Recluse, this autobiographical account of the poet's intellectual and spiritual development was published posthumously (1850) in a revised form. Rejecting contemporary rationalist philosophies, it proclaims Wordsworth's faith in the redeeming power of poetry and the imagination.

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