💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Foresend"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| premisenoun | A proposition antecedently supposed or proved; something previously stated or assumed as the basis of further argument; a condition; a supposition. |
| forebringverb | (transitive) To bring before; bring beforehand. |
| foremoveverb | (ambitransitive) To move beforehand; move in advance. |
| precedeverb | (transitive) To go before, go in front of. |
| foreleadverb | (transitive) To lead forth; lead forward; lead before. |
| foresingverb | (transitive) To sing beforehand or in advance. |
| foredrawverb | (transitive) To draw beforehand or in advance; draw forward. |
| forereadyverb | (transitive) To make ready ahead of time; prepare in advance. |
| come beforeverb | (transitive) To precede. |
| foreguideverb | (transitive) To guide beforehand or in advance; guide forth or forward. |
| foregazenoun | A gaze that is forward or beforehand. |
| forerunnoun | To precede; to forecast or foreshadow. |
| foreseekverb | (transitive) To seek beforehand; seek in advance. |
| forespreadverb | (very rare, ambitransitive) To spread before; spread in front of; spread in advance of. |
| pretransmitverb | (transitive) To transmit in advance. |
| forespendverb | (transitive) To spend beforehand or in advance. |
| præcedeverb | Obsolete spelling of precede. [(transitive) To go before, go in front of.] |
| preposenoun | (transitive) To place or set (something) before; to prefix. |
| predecessverb | (transitive) To precede; to come before. |
| foreloadverb | (transitive) To load beforehand or in advance. |
Translate “Foresend” into Another Language
Pick a language — the word will be pre-filled in the translator.