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Prospect Place Semi Finals Reasonable Debts Paid Promotion Noun

Word prospect
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / ˈprɒspekt / NAmE / ˈprɑːspekt /
Example
  • there is no immediate prospect of peace.
  • a place in the semi-finals is in prospect (= likely to happen).
  • there's a reasonable prospect that his debts will be paid.
  • an exciting prospect
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prospect

(noun)BrE / ˈprɒspekt / NAmE / ˈprɑːspekt /
  1. the possibility that something will happen
    • There is no immediate prospect of peace.
    • A place in the semi-finals is in prospect (= likely to happen).
    • There's a reasonable prospect that his debts will be paid.
  2. an idea of what might or will happen in the future
    • an exciting prospect
    • Travelling alone around the world is a daunting prospect.
    • The prospect of becoming a father filled him with alarm.
  3. the chances of being successful
    • good job/employment/career prospects
    • At 25 he was an unemployed musician with no prospects.
    • Long-term prospects for the economy have improved.
    • What are the prospects of promotion in this job?
  4. a person who is likely to be successful in a competition
    • She is one of Canada's best prospects for a gold medal.
  5. a wide view of an area of land, etc.
    • a delightful prospect of the lake

    Extra Examples

    • Getting the right qualifications will enhance your employment prospects.
    • I don’t relish the prospect of having to share an office.
    • Major developments are in prospect for the company.
    • Their prospects of employment look better than last year.
    • There is little prospect of any improvement in the weather.
    • This position offers a good starting salary and excellent promotion prospects.
    • This position offers excellent promotion prospects.
    • a list of the hot new prospects on the literary scene
    • A place in the semi-finals is in prospect.
    • There’s a reasonable prospect that his debts will be paid.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English (as a noun denoting the action of looking towards a distant object): from Latin prospectus ‘view’, from prospicere ‘look forward’, from pro- ‘forward’ + specere ‘to look’. Early use, referring to a view of landscape, gave rise to the meaning ‘mental picture’ (mid 16th cent.), which led to the meaning ‘anticipated event’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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