preplay

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

pre- +‎ play

Verb[edit]

preplay (third-person singular simple present preplays, present participle preplaying, simple past and past participle preplayed)

  1. (transitive) To visualize in advance.
    • 2007, Ross Bentley, Speed Secrets 6: The Perfect Driver, page 16:
      Overall, mental imagery can and should be used for the following: To see success—A driver can develop his or her belief system by recalling past successes, and preplaying success in future events.
    • 2013, James Womack, Black Dad-White Dad: The James Womack Story, page 195:
      Since my bullying days at St. Francis, I have preplayed and responded to every worst-case scenario I could imagine.

Adjective[edit]

preplay (not comparable)

  1. (game theory) Before play begins.
    a preplay negotiation period