Prolong — Pro*long , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Prolonged}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Prolonging}.] [F. prolonger, L. prolongare; pro before, forth + longus long. See {Long}, a., and cf. {Prolongate}, {Purloin}. ] [1913 Webster] 1. To extend in space or length; as, to… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
prolong — early 15c., from O.Fr. prolonguer (13c.), from L.L. prolongare to prolong, extend, from L. pro forth (see PRO (Cf. pro )) + longus long (adj.); see LONG (Cf. long) (adj.) … Etymology dictionary
prolong — protract, Cxtend, lengthen, elongate Analogous words: Continue, last, persist, endure: increase, augment, enlarge: *expand, amplify Antonyms: curtail Contrasted words: *shorten, abridge, abbreviate, retrench … New Dictionary of Synonyms
prolong — [v] extend, draw out carry on, continue, delay, drag one’s feet*, drag out*, hold, hold up, increase, lengthen, let it ride*, make longer, pad*, perpetuate, protract, spin out*, stall, stretch, stretch out; concepts 239,250 Ant. abbreviate,… … New thesaurus
prolong — ► VERB 1) extend the duration of. 2) technical extend in spatial length. DERIVATIVES prolongation noun. ORIGIN Latin prolongare … English terms dictionary
prolong — [prə lôŋ′gāt΄] vt. prolongated, prolongating [prō lôŋ′, prəlôŋ′] vt. [ME prolongen < MFr prolonguer < LL prolongare < L pro , forth + longus, long: see PRO 2 & LONG1] to lengthen or extend in time or space: also prolongate [pr … English World dictionary
Prolong — Le Prolong est un traitement médical fictif de la série de romans Honor Harrington de David Weber. Le prolong est un processus de génie génétique ayant pour résultat la prolongation de l’espérance de vie. Elle a été développée sur Beowulf deux ou … Wikipédia en Français
prolong — verb ADVERB ▪ significantly ▪ indefinitely ▪ Might it be possible to prolong life indefinitely? ▪ artificially ▪ deliberately … Collocations dictionary
prolong — prolongable, adj. prolongableness, n. prolongably, adv. prolonger, n. prolongment, n. /preuh lawng , long /, v.t. 1. to lengthen out in time; extend the duration of; cause to continue longer: to prolong one s stay abroad. 2. to make longer in… … Universalium
prolong — pro|long [prəˈlɔŋ US ˈlo:ŋ] v [T] [Date: 1400 1500; : Old French; Origin: prolonguer, from Late Latin prolongare, from Latin longus long ] 1.) to deliberately make something such as a feeling or activity last longer = ↑lengthen ▪ I was trying to… … Dictionary of contemporary English