˜yĐÄvlog

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preemptively

or ±è°ù±đ-±đłŸ±è·łÙŸ±±č±đ·±ôČâ

[ pree-emp-tiv-lee ]

adverb

  1. before or in preference to other buyers, claimants, candidates, etc.:

    TriStar has preemptively purchased the movie rights to Williams’ new novel, the sequel to her debut bestseller.

  2. as a measure taken against something anticipated or feared; preventively:

    Knowing I’d be practicing piano for hours every day, I preemptively left polite notes for the upstairs and downstairs neighbors—with cookies attached—apologizing for the noise.

  3. Bridge. (said of bidding) at an unnecessarily high level, as a defensive maneuver to make communication between one’s opponents more difficult:

    The more tricks you are certain of winning, given your hand, the higher the level at which you can bid preemptively.



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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

A flashback shows the pair arguing over their living situation; he’s enthusiastic about relocating the family to the farmhouse, and she’s preemptively suffocating from seclusion’s effects on her work as an artist.

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Still more have preemptively yanked products from their shelves.

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Despite the vagueness of the order, some schools are moving to preemptively comply with the untested order, scrubbing their websites of mentions of diversity and changing programming.

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Edison has said it preemptively cut power to a limited number of lower-capacity distribution lines — the sort typically carried by wooden poles to individual homes and businesses — in areas closest to Eaton Canyon.

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Pitting lab-grown meat against farmers and the beef industry, Florida and Alabama preemptively banned the sale of cultivated meat last year.

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