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  1. Dictionary
    Prel·ude
    /ˈprelˌyo͞od/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. serve as a prelude or introduction to: "the bombardment preluded an all-out final attack"
  2. The meaning of PRELUDE is an introductory performance, action, or event preceding and preparing for the principal or a more important matter. How to use prelude in a sentence.

  3. PRELUDE definition: 1. something that comes before a more important event or action that introduces or prepares for it…. Learn more.

  4. noun. a preliminary to an action, event, condition, or work of broader scope and higher importance. Synonyms: beginning, opening, introduction. any action, event, comment, etc. that precedes something else. Music. a relatively short, independent instrumental composition, free in form and resembling an improvisation.

  5. A prelude is an introductory action, event, or performance that comes before a bigger or more momentous one. It is made of up the prefix pre- meaning "before," and the Latin root ludere meaning "play."

  6. prelude (to something) an action or event that happens before another more important one and forms an introduction to it. This is just a prelude to a larger attack.

  7. prelude. You can describe an event as a prelude to a more important event when it happens before it and acts as an introduction to it. The conference, which closed yesterday, was a prelude to a Communist Party Central Committee meeting. A prelude is a short piece of music for the piano or organ.

  8. 1. An introductory performance, event, or action preceding a more important one; a preliminary or preface. 2. Music. a. A piece or movement that serves as an introduction to another section or composition and establishes the key, such as one that precedes a fugue, opens a suite, or precedes a church service. b.

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