Idioms for advance

    in advance, ahead of time; beforehand: You must get your tickets in advance.
    in advance of, in front of; before: Heralds walked in advance of the king.

Origin of advance

1200–50; Middle English avauncen < Anglo-French, Old French avanc(i)er < Vulgar Latin *abantiāre, verbal derivative of Late Latin abante in front (of) (Latin ab away from, off + ante before); ad- by mistaking a- for a-5 in the 16th cent.

synonym study for advance

13. Advance, move on, proceed all imply movement forward. Advance applies to forward movement, especially toward an objective: to advance to a platform. Proceed emphasizes movement, as from one place to another, and often implies continuing after a halt: to proceed on one's journey. Move on is similar in meaning to proceed; it does not, however, imply a definite goal: The crowd was told to move on.

OTHER WORDS FROM advance

ad·vanc·ing·ly, adverb o·ver·ad·vance, verb, o·ver·ad·vanced, o·ver·ad·vanc·ing, noun un·ad·vanc·ing, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for advance

British Dictionary definitions for advance

advance
/ (ədˈvɑːns) /

verb

noun

See also advances

Derived forms of advance

advancer, noun advancingly, adverb

Word Origin for advance

C15: advauncen, altered (on the model of words beginning with Latin ad-) from C13 avauncen, via Old French from Latin abante from before, from ab- away from + ante before

Idioms and Phrases with advance

advance

see in advance; make advances.