Prepare in a sentence as a verb

To properly prepare for these interviews you have to invest quite a bit of time.

We aren't quite there yet, but we should prepare for a future that is not a simple clone of the 2004-2008 era of browser development.

This does not adequately prepare graduates for tight-knit teams in a professional setting.

Something like this, released by a bad guy and without the world having time to prepare, could wipe out more than half the population in a matter of months.

When I started my work at SpaceX, one of the engineers told me to prepare to shed some blood and tears as well as prepare for the most stressful yet rewarding work of your life.

This is the kind of thing I'd like to read for myself, as advice from one dad to another, and the kind of thing I'd like my children to read to prepare for their own independent adult lives.

And someday, I hope that my rudimentary understanding of category theory will prepare me to understand why adjoint functors are interesting.

Counting prepares you for addition, addition prepares you for multiplication, basic arithmetic for algebra, algebra for calculus, and so on.

This is the much more detailed indexing of contracts, covenants, tracking down old shareholders, etc. Hopefully if you did the above point, this is made easier, since you're at least storing everything in one place- Then in the DD phase, there's going to be requests that you just can't prepare for, because they're out of left-field.

There have been great opportunities for us in America and much that my wife can cherish even though none of her primary or secondary education was intended to prepare her for life in the United States, and none of my higher education was intended as anything but preparation for living in east Asia.

The basic issue is whether people in free countries, like most readers of Hacker News, are going to be able to enjoy the right of free speech throughout their country, on any subject, or whether any American or Dutch person or other person accustomed to free speech who happens to be within reach of attack by a crazy foreign person has to prepare for war just to continue to exercise free speech.

Prepare definitions

verb

make ready or suitable or equip in advance for a particular purpose or for some use, event, etc; "Get the children ready for school!"; "prepare for war"; "I was fixing to leave town after I paid the hotel bill"

See also: ready

verb

prepare for eating by applying heat; "Cook me dinner, please"; "can you make me an omelette?"; "fix breakfast for the guests, please"

See also: cook ready make

verb

to prepare verbally, either for written or spoken delivery; "prepare a report"; "prepare a speech"

verb

arrange by systematic planning and united effort; "machinate a plot"; "organize a strike"; "devise a plan to take over the director's office"

See also: organize organise devise machinate

verb

educate for a future role or function; "He is grooming his son to become his successor"; "The prince was prepared to become King one day"; "They trained him to be a warrior"

See also: groom train

verb

create by training and teaching; "The old master is training world-class violinists"; "we develop the leaders for the future"

See also: train develop educate

verb

lead up to and soften by sounding the dissonant note in it as a consonant note in the preceding chord; "prepare the discord in bar 139"

verb

undergo training or instruction in preparation for a particular role, function, or profession; "She is training to be a teacher"; "He trained as a legal aid"

See also: train