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presto

[ UK /pɹˈɛstə‍ʊ/ ]
[ US /ˈpɹɛsˌtoʊ/ ]
ADVERB
  1. at a very fast tempo (faster than allegro)
  2. suddenly
    Presto! begone! 'tis here again
ADJECTIVE
  1. (of tempo) very fast

How To Use presto In A Sentence

  • There, the cook grills your ingredients and presto, you have lunch.
  • This job title presto changeo is just like the presto changeo of MK77, really bad if Saddam uses it, not so much if the US uses it the same way. Think Progress » Woodward Reveals Important Clues About White House Smear Campaign
  • There are parallels with Preston Tucker, the idealistic American inventor.
  • - Preston Zimmerman - Kapfenberg - went the distance but lost 0-2 at home to Rapid Wien. Du Nord
  • The 1947 classic film 'Wild Harvest' is about a love triangle between Dorothy Lamour, Alan Ladd and Robert Preston.
  • I remember talking to a former playing colleague of yours at Preston, right-winger Les Campbell.
  • It points out that stations where the situation is particularly acute include Crewe, Preston and Carlisle, but the situation is also serious at Oxenholme.
  • Earlier today, Paul Preston, a.k.a., "pacified," posted a note on SoapBlox. net calling an end to the service, as Politico's Ben Smith reports: SoapBlox Burnout Points to Vulnerability in Left's Infrastructure
  • The magistrates committed her to Preston Crown Court for sentence after ruling their powers of punishment were insufficient.
  • These organisms are small and rarely noticed, much like relative nobody Preston. The Sun
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