premediate

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English

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Etymology

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From pre- +‎ mediate.

Verb

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premediate (third-person singular simple present premediates, present participle premediating, simple past and past participle premediated)

  1. To advocate.
  2. To frame or mediate beforehand.
    • 2010, R. Grusin, Premediation: Affect and Mediality After 9/11, page 46:
      Just as remediation insists on the inseparabiilty of reality and mediation — the reality of media, their materiality as objects of circulation within the world of humans and non-humans, of society and of things — so the concept of premediation insists on the reality of premediated futures, or, as I argue later in this chapter, on the reality of these virtual futures.
    • 2013, Andrew Hoskins, ‎Ben O'Loughlin, War and Media, page 1882:
      But the cueing of atrocity memory through substitutional representation can also be deployed to premediate events– in other words to frame the story before the event even begins .
    • 2019, W. Kang, G. H. Mead’s Concept of Rationality, page 86:
      Rather, by trying to premediate as many of the possible worlds, or possible paths, as the future could be imagined to take, premediation bears some affinities to the logic of designing a video game..
    • 2022, Andrew Baldwin, The Other of Climate Change, page 129:
      Both, however, premediate the future by naming the migration effects of climate change in advance of their occurring and, in doing so, at least partially ensure that, should such futures materialise, they will not register as unanticipated political emergencies but as fully anticipated outcomes of climate change.

Anagrams

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