the activities that take place to get ready for an event
Prepare means to get ready.
PREPARATION : the process of getting ready for an activity, event, or goal.
No, the word 'ready' is a verb and an adjective.Examples:I will ready the fire while you prepare the food. (verb)She had a ready answer for every question. (adjective)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.In the first example sentence, the pronoun 'I' takes the place of the noun (name) for the person speaking, the pronoun 'you' takes the place of the noun (name) for the person spoken to.In the second sentence, the pronoun 'she' takes the place of the noun (name) for a female spoken about.
Usually, but it can be a verb and in Britain, a noun.
It means one who is ready to sacrifice or to be dead for the king.It also means that one who does not have fear about death and is ready to die at any moment.
'Prepare' means to get ready for an event of some kind.
To await for something means to wait for, to expect, or to be ready for a specific event.
Prepare means to get ready.
The expression "off your guard" means that you are not prepared; that you are not watching for something and are not ready; that you are relaxed and not tense with waiting for some event.
A milestone event that dramatically accelerated the need for ready-made work clothes was the Gold Rush of 1848.
The word that means ready when needed is "prepared."
That was ready by 1892.
They will be ready when you need to use them in a safe place. Asdf. They will be ready when you need to use them in a safe place. Asdf. They will be ready when you need to use them in a safe place. Asdf. They will be ready when you need to use them in a safe place. Asdf.
Ex stock means existing in stock means ready to dispatch means ready in stock = Available in stock
To get ready enough for some future event
As a question: Is it ready? or Are You Ready? As a statement It/he is ready.
Ex stock means existing in stock means ready to dispatch means ready in stock = Available in stock