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premeditate

When you premeditate, you are planning ahead. While most people associate this word with crime, let's hope you can think of a better reason to premeditate — like buying groceries before a storm.

When you meditate, you think deeply. The prefix pre- means “before,” so to premeditate means to think about a situation before you’ve jumped into it. If you’ve ever cooked a meal, you’ve premeditated the ingredients you need to get started. In a courtroom you’ll hear about "premeditated murder," which means the accused killer planned out his crime and it wasn’t a crime of passion. Premeditating can be a good thing, but not when it involves murder.

DEFINITIONS OF: premeditate

1

v consider, ponder, or plan (an action) beforehand

premeditated murder”
Type of:
consider, debate, deliberate, moot, turn over
think about carefully; weigh

v think or reflect beforehand or in advance

“I rarely premeditate, which is a mistake”
Type of:
chew over, contemplate, excogitate, meditate, mull, mull over, muse, ponder, reflect, ruminate, speculate, think over
reflect deeply on a subject
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