(Usually followed by `to' or `for') on the point of or strongly disposed.
1Paradee presents third up and looks primed to turn the result around.
2In 2005, a generation primed for action got the politics of delusion.
3From Detroit to Dallas, even the oil establishment is primed for change.
4If a primed cache is less likely, inlining becomes a better choice.
5THEY have the perfect blank canvas: ripped bodies primed for peak performance.
6She clearly wasn't in the best of moods or primed for conversation.
7That suggests Hekla is primed to go off in the near future.
8I can get primed and ready to climb on the coldest days.
9The orator speaks to masses of individuals, already well primed with herd-poison.
10The guards primed their weapons and distant gunfire reverberated in the hallway.
11It felt like an explosive, primed to go off at any moment.
12These newly recruited T cells are phenotypically distinct from those primed earlier.
13I primed the syringe and pushed the antibiotics into the IV line.
14Mackenzie did not stir, but ordered fusees primed and the canoe gummed.
15Cipriani is primed to reignite England's backline in partnership with Owen Farrell.
16The day is also primed for some warm moments in romance too!
Sobre este termo
primed
prime Verbo
Indicativo · Pretérito perfeito
Primed nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América