Predate vs Demolish - What's the difference?
predate | demolish |
To designate a date earlier than the actual one; to move a date, appointment, event, or period of time to an earlier point (contrast "postdate".)
To exist, or to occur before something else; to antedate (the more correct term for this usage.)
A publication, such as a newspaper or magazine, that is issued with a printed date later than the date of issue.
To prey upon something.
To destroy; to destruct.
(figuratively) To utterly defeat.
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=October 2
, author=Kevin Core
, title=Fulham 6 - 0 QPR
, work=BBC Sport
As verbs the difference between predate and demolish
is that predate is to designate a date earlier than the actual one; to move a date, appointment, event, or period of time to an earlier point (contrast "postdate") or predate can be to prey upon something while demolish is to destroy; to destruct.As a noun predate
is a publication, such as a newspaper or magazine, that is issued with a printed date later than the date of issue.predate
English
Etymology 1
From pre- 'before' + dateVerb
- The Japanese use of Pascal's Triangle predates its discovery by Blaise Pascal.
Usage notes
The transitive sense of moving an event to an earlier point is the proper one for "predate." "Antedate" is the correct term for occurring before something else. These terms are frequently misused even in educated writing.Synonyms
* (to designate a date earlier): antedateAntonyms
* (to designate a date earlier): postdateNoun
(en noun)Etymology 2
From predation, predatorVerb
Synonyms
* (to prey upon): preyAnagrams
* * * * English heteronyms ----demolish
English
Verb
(es)- They demolished the old house and put up four townhouses.
citation, page= , passage=Andrew Johnson scored a hat-trick as Fulham demolished London rivals Queens Park Rangers to win their Premier League fixture of the season.}}
