"Prepositioned" Pronounce,Meaning And Examples

"Prepositioned" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers

Prepositioned
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"Prepositioned" Meaning

Prepositioned refers to something that has been placed or located in a particular position or order, often in advance or beforehand, in relation to something else.

"Prepositioned" Examples

The strategy was already prepositioned in the campaign plan.
The army will preposition troops and equipment near the border.
The government has prepositioned relief supplies in the affected areas.
The company prepositioned its marketing team to handle the deal.
The director decided to preposition the camera to capture a wider view.

"Prepositioned" Similar Words

Preponderantly

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Preponderate

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To preponderate means to be greater in number, amount, or degree than someone or something else; to have a dominant influence or overwhelming superiority. It can also imply to have the advantage or upper hand.<br><br>Example: The weight of the evidence preponderated in favor of the defendant in the trial.<br><br>Synonyms: overwhelm, predominate, outweigh, prevail.

Preponderates

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To outbalance or outnumber something so much that the majority wins or is more important.<br><br>Example: "In this election, the party in power currently preponderates, so it's likely that they will win again."

Preponderous

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Prepone

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To bring forward or forward an event in time; to precede something by bringing it forward in time.

Preposition

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Prepositional

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A prepositional phrase is a phrase that begins with a preposition and ends with an object, a complement, or another phrase. It typically expresses a relationship between the object of the preposition and other words in the sentence.<br><br>Examples:<br><br> "in the park" (prepositional phrase)<br> "with my friends" (prepositional phrase)<br> "on the bus" (prepositional phrase)<br><br>A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence. Common prepositions include words such as "in," "on," "at," "by," "with," and "under."<br><br>Prepositional phrases can function as adjectives or as adverbs, and they can provide important information about the location, time, manner, or relationship of the object or activity being described.

Prepositionally

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Prepositioning

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Prepositions

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Prepositive

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Prepositure

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Prepossess

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To prepossess something means to affect or influence someone's opinion or mind before it is actually known or understood. In other words, it means to bias or prejudice someone's perception or view.

Prepossessed

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Prepossessing

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Prepossessingness

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