arrange in advance
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advance man — ☆ advance man n. a person hired to travel in advance of a theatrical company, political candidate, etc. to arrange for publicity, schedule appearances, etc … English World dictionary
Advance Directives Act — The Texas Advance Directives Act (1999), also known as the Texas Futile Care Law, describes certain provisions that are now Chapter 166 of the Texas Health Safety Code. Controversy over these provisions mainly centers on Section 166.046,… … Wikipedia
advance person — noun Someone who travels to a destination in order to arrange accommodation, meetings, security, etc. for one or more celebrities, politicians, business leaders, or other public figures who will arrive subsequently. It was a stretch for even the… … Wiktionary
arrange — verb 1》 put in a neat, attractive, or required order. 2》 organize or plan. ↘reach agreement about an action or event in advance: they arranged to meet at eleven o clock. 3》 Music adapt (a composition) for performance with instruments or… … English new terms dictionary
pre-arrange — verb To arrange in advance … Wiktionary
pre-arrange — ► VERB ▪ arrange or agree in advance … English terms dictionary
stack — [stak] n. [ME stac < ON stakkr, akin to MLowG stack, barrier of slanting stakes: for IE base see STICK] 1. a large pile of straw, hay, etc., esp. one neatly arranged, as in a conical form, for outdoor storage 2. any somewhat orderly pile or… … English World dictionary
prearrange — prearrangement, n. /pree euh raynj /, v.t., prearranged, prearranging. to arrange in advance or beforehand. [1805 15; PRE + ARRANGE] * * * … Universalium
prearrange — I verb agree to beforehand, arrange beforehand, arrange in advance, concoct, consider beforehand, ensure a result, forearm, foreordain, lay down a plan, map out, plan, plot, preconcert, precontrive, predesign, predestinate, predestine,… … Law dictionary
separate — [15] Etymologically, separate means ‘arrange apart’. It comes from the past participle of Latin sēparāre, a compound verb formed from the prefix sē ‘apart’ and parāre ‘arrange (in advance), furnish, make ready’ (source also of English prepare).… … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins