Antonym: finale. Similar words: elude, delude, include, seclude, exclude, reluctant, secluded, conclude. Meaning: ['preljuːd] n. 1. something that serves as a preceding event or introduces what follows 2. music that precedes a fugue or introduces an act in an opera. v. 1. serve as a prelude or opening to 2. play as a prelude.
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(61) This very recklessness makes me feel that these costly operations may be only the prelude to far larger events which impend on land.
(62) The prelude of the night is commenced in the music of the sunset, in its solemn hymn to the imitable dark.
(63) This year's Taipei mayoral election is being seen as a prelude to the upcoming presidential election.
(64) The person, whoever it was, gave a small cough, evidently as a prelude to speaking.
(65) Acheson's speech, Truman was known as " the prelude to the Marshall Plan. "
(66) His investigations were a necessary prelude to the subsequent discovery of the cause of particle motions.
(67) In the foreground lies the peaceful Prelude Lake, located about 30 kilometers east of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada.
(68) Meanwhile the Russian pianist-composer Rachmaninoff, the romantic musician, was renowned for "Prelude in C Sharp Minor". "
(69) The fighting in the streets may be a prelude to more serious trouble.
(70) Novelty ignites scintilla admittedly easily, novelty always also is the prelude of the distance.
(71) This is the prelude of the music of love, the osculatory means before a kind of sexual behavior, what reveal interest to the other side is enunciative .
(72) By analyzing Runyang's Musicological Analysis of Prelude and Finale of Tristan and Isolde , the author made some suggestion on discipline development of musical analysis.
(73) One piece was the harpsichord part for the Concerto in G (molto allegro) and the other was the Prelude in G major.
(74) You can note the dispatch order that his body place issues, baconian the physiology response that gives his climax prelude.
(75) The conference, which closed yesterday, was a prelude to a Communist Party Central Committee meeting.
(76) SCARLATTI any two contrasting sonatas of your own choice or BACH any one "Well Tempered Clavier" Prelude and Fugue.
(77) A form of address is the prelude to personal association and its proper use is the prerequisite to achieve the aim of personal contact.
(78) As a prelude to the discussion of the photoelectric effect,[sentencedict .com] we consider briefly a related phenomenon.
(79) Fried chicken – "Cockerel's Solo", cabbage and cucumber salad – "Vegetable Prelude", schnitzel – "Royal Meal", meat in a jug – "Village Paradise", pumpkin porridge – "King Arthur's Golden Porridge".
(80) This information is valuable both as a prelude to linkage analysis, which generally assumes Mendelian transmission.
(81) Father and Son, as a prelude of the English new biography, has ushered in the wave of patricide into modernist literature.
(82) The acceptance of his article might be the prelude to a run of badly - needed luck .
(83) In the 20th century, Shchedrin wrote from 1963 to 1970 the 24 Prelude and Fugue, which was called by a lot of critics as "collector of The Well-Tempered Clavier".
(84) She had no wish, however, that for the moment such a prelude should have a sequel.
(85) But these graffiti were just the prelude to an even bigger find.
(86) Last year, Bernanke used the podium to suggest the Fed could help growth by buying long-term bonds, a prelude to a program enacted soon afterward that did just that.
(87) In prairie vole society, sex is the prelude to a long-term pair bonding of a male and female.
(88) Michelson and Morley had sounded the prelude to special relativity.
(89) Actually sweeping and kitchen god worshiping mark the prelude to all the New Year ceremonies.
(90) That Shchedrin's 24 Prelude and Fugue is an important work of the counterpoint music in 20 th century.
More similar words: elude, delude, include, seclude, exclude, reluctant, secluded, conclude, reluctance, interlude, concluded, reluctantly, prelate, preliminary, hallelujah, including, excluding, ludicrous, rude, dude, crude, denude, prudent, intrude, student, aptitude, impudent, cum laude, attitude, rely.