preimpose

verb

Etymology

From pre- + impose.

  1. derived from impositus — “established; put upon, imposed
  2. derived from *h₂pó
  3. derived from impōnō — “to place or set (something) on; (figurative) to impose (a duty, tax, etc.)
  4. derived from emposer
  5. derived from imposer
  6. inherited from imposen — “to place, set; to impose (a duty, etc.)
  7. prefixed as preimpose — “pre + impose

Definitions

  1. To impose ahead of time.

    • Indeed, the application of such procedures to raw data to produce dose-response curves tor examination and extrapolation tends to preimpose linearity.
    • It furthermore confirms, as James A. Davies has shown, that when drawn to contemporaries, Forster did not preimpose ideas upon his material as he did with those of the past, but presented 'honest revelation' bordering on explicitness.
    • Do not preimpose a subtopical order. Do not worry if a question seems repetitive; you will sort that out a bit later.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for preimpose. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA