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View synonyms for presto

presto

[ pres-toh ]

adverb

  1. quickly, rapidly, or immediately.
  2. at a rapid tempo (used as a musical direction).


adjective

  1. quick or rapid.
  2. executed at a rapid tempo (used as a musical direction).

noun

, plural pres·tos.
  1. Music. a movement or piece in quick tempo.

presto

/ ˈprɛstəʊ /

adjective

  1. music to be played very fast


adverb

  1. immediately, suddenly, or at once (esp in the phrase hey presto )

noun

  1. music a movement or passage directed to be played very quickly

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Word History and Origins

Origin of presto1

1590–1600; < Italian: quick, quickly < Late Latin praestus (adj.) ready, Latin praestō (adv.) at hand

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Word History and Origins

Origin of presto1

C16: from Italian: fast, from Late Latin praestus (adj) ready to hand, Latin praestō (adv) present

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Example Sentences

“We used to go for food at a little Italian place on Old Compton Street called Presto,” says Burston.

By simply saying those nine simple words we can magically claim anything for Islam, presto-chango.

And presto: polio returned—first in Nigeria then across Africa and into Asia, following an established migration pattern.

Toss a Cinderella- or Stockholm Syndrome-type victim into the mix and presto!

But these people are wholly on wires; laying their ears down, skimming away, pausing as though shot, and presto!

Mr. Jefferson, happening by mistake to pass over one of the many names of benefactors, and, presto!

A clerk on a stool, and hey presto plunged into the war a month after, shouldering a gun and marching.

Then Mrs. Spider came along, and she spun some glossy silk web over the places where the seams were, and presto-chango!

Victor had much difficulty in reading the notes readily and not confounding the terms adagio, presto, and sforzando.

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