prefade

English

Etymology

From pre- +β€Ž fade.

Verb

prefade (third-person singular simple present prefades, present participle prefading, simple past and past participle prefaded)

  1. (broadcasting, transitive) To fade (an audio track) before it is broadcast, by listening in advance.
  2. (manufacturing, transitive) To give (clothing, etc.) a faded appearance at the time of manufacture.
    • 2009 May 7, Cintra Wilson, β€œIs There a Setting for High Strung?”, in New York Timesβ€Ž[1]:
      These jeans had very fussy suggestions for upkeep and seemed to prefer that I never wash them again, lest I fade their artistically prefaded denim to a more amateurish color level.

Noun

prefade (plural prefades)

  1. (broadcasting) An audio fade prepared before broadcast.