pretheater
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]pretheater (not comparable) (American spelling)
- Before attending the theater (especially of drinks or a meal).
- 1999 March 29, Enid Nemy, “Metropolitan Diary”, in New York Times[1]:
- We picked up our tickets and stopped next door to have a pretheater drink.
- 2000 February 9, Rick Marin, “Fashionably Early: New York Starts Buzzing Before Dusk”, in New York Times[2]:
- Metrazur, in Grand Central Terminal, throws in a free miniature "suitcase" with its pretheater meal, filled with cookies to munch on during intermission and a $3 MetroCard for the commute to Broadway.
- 2002 November 3, Bruce McCall, “NEW YORK OBSERVED; For Every Light on Broadway, a Case of Indigestion”, in New York Times[3]:
- If time just doesn't allow for a pretheater restaurant dinner, some places -- Broadway Sal's is one -- can arrange to deliver dinner right to your theater seat.
- Preceding the formation of theater.