The prefix that means "to go before in time" is "pre-." It is derived from Latin and is commonly used in various English words to indicate something that occurs prior to a specified event or time, such as "prehistoric" or "premature."
it is because prehistory was written in a different way
Pre-history, or pre-historic (Obviously!)
History that is before "recorded time" (i.e. taxes being collected prior to records of those taxes being kept)
The use of written languageThe ability to convey events. Prehistory refers to time before writing and history refers to time after writing.
the pre-contact period is a time of the native tribes around the 1700's. i am doing a project on this. hope i helped u out.
The word starting with "pre" that means to go before time is "premature."
One prefix that means before is "pre" as in the word pretest.
pre means before so a prefix is a stem before the word
It means before like prejudge or precount
The root word pre means before. Some examples are prelimary and present
"Pre" is a prefix. A prefix is a half word that is placed before a word to emphazise it's meaning. The best way to use the word "pre" would be to use a hyphen. The word "pre" usually means before.
before
Oper is the prefix. There is no suffix. Able is the root word.
The suffix "pre-" means before. It is typically added to words to indicate that something comes before the main word or concept.
pre-
The prefix pre- means before. You can easily see that in the word prefix.
That would be 'pre-heat'.