Preoperculum
(||Pre`o*per"cu*lum) n. [NL.] (Anat.) The anterior opercular bone in fishes.

Preopinion
(Pre`o*pin"ion) n. Opinion previously formed; prepossession; prejudice. Sir T. Browne.

Preoption
(Pre*op"tion) n. Right of first choice.

Preoral
(Pre*o"ral) a. (Anat.) Situated in front of, or anterior to, the mouth; as, preoral bands.

Preorbital
(Pre*or"bit*al) a. (Anat.) Situated in front or the orbit.

Preordain
(Pre`or*dain") v. t. [Pref. pre + ordain: cf. L. praeordinare.] To ordain or appoint beforehand: to predetermine: to foreordain. Milton.

Preorder
(Pre*or"der) v. t. To order to arrange beforehand; to foreordain. Sir W. Hamilton.

Preordinance
(Pre*or"di*nance) n. Antecedent decree or determination. Shak.

Preordinate
(Pre*or"di*nate) a. [L. praeordinatus, p. p. See Preordain.] Preordained. [R.] Sir T. Elyot.

Preordination
(Pre*or`di*na"tion) n. [Cf. F. préordination.] The act of foreordaining: previous determination. "The preordination of God." Bale.

Preparable
(Pre*par"a*ble) a. Capable of being prepared. "Medicine preparable by art." Boyle.

Preparation
(Prep`a*ra"tion) n. [F. préparation, L. praeparatio. See Prepare.]

1. The act of preparing or fitting beforehand for a particular purpose, use, service, or condition; previous arrangement or adaptation; a making ready; as, the preparation of land for a crop of wheat; the preparation of troops for a campaign.

2. The state of being prepared or made ready; preparedness; readiness; fitness; as, a nation in good preparation for war.

3. That which makes ready, prepares the way, or introduces; a preparatory act or measure.

I will show what preparations there were in nature for this dissolution.
T. Burnet.

4. That which is prepared, made, or compounded by a certain process or for a particular purpose; a combination. Specifically: (a) Any medicinal substance fitted for use. (b) Anything treated for preservation or examination as a specimen. (c) Something prepared for use in cookery.

I wish the chemists had been more sparing who magnify their preparations.
Sir T. Browne.

In the preparations of cookery, the most volatile parts of vegetables are destroyed.
Arbuthnot.

5. An army or fleet. [Obs.] Shak.

6. (Mus.) The holding over of a note from one chord into the next chord, where it forms a temporary discord, until resolved in the chord that follows; the anticipation of a discordant note in the preceding concord, so that the ear is prepared for the shock. See Suspension.

7. Accomplishment; qualification. [Obs.] Shak.

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