prevention
/pɹɪˈvɛnʃən/
This term carries a proactive and strategic connotation, emphasizing the action taken before a negative event occurs rather than reacting to it after the fact. It is frequently employed in medical, legal, and security contexts to describe systemic measures designed to eliminate risks or stop a specific outcome from manifesting. Grammatically, this noun is typically uncountable when referring to the general concept or practice of stopping something. While it can occasionally be pluralized in technical or administrative contexts to describe specific types of preventative measures, it generally functions as a mass noun and does not take an indefinite article in general usage.
Used as an abstract concept of stopping an event, such as in the phrase "prevention of crime."
💬Casual Conversation
The client's data is a mess. We need a prevention plan before this spirals.
Let's just touch base later. Don't sweat the small stuff.
Meanings
Etymology
Derived from the Latin word praeventio, which stems from praevenire, meaning to come before or anticipate. This is a combination of prae (before) and venire (to come). The term entered Middle English via Old French, evolving from a sense of anticipating an event to the active process of stopping an undesirable occurrence before it takes place.