pre-position
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
See also: preposition
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- preposition (sometimes proscribed)
Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]pre-position (third-person singular simple present pre-positions, present participle pre-positioning, simple past and past participle pre-positioned)
- (transitive) To position (something) ahead of time. (The objects thus positioned are usually supplies, tools, instruments, weapons, or troops.)
- Hypernym: position
- She pre-positioned the surgical instruments in trays on a numbered rack.
- The officers deemed it necessary to pre-position at least three battalions in case of a breakout.
Usage notes
[edit]- Some stylesheets hold the hyphen to be mandatory in this term to avoid preventable homography with preposition. In this regard compare other similar pairs such as re-create/recreate, re-treat/retreat, and un-ionized/unionized.
- Even when this advice is strictly adhered to, such hyphens are forgone where they are unnecessary for clarity (for example, in pretreat and pretreatment).