Upfront vs Prepaid - What's the difference?
upfront | prepaid |
honest, frank and straightforward
In a forward, leading or frontward position.
(of money) paid in advance
beforehand
(football) As an attacker
(television) A meeting of network executives with the press and major advertisers, signaling the start of advertising sales for a new season
* {{quote-news, year=2007, date=May 17, author=Bill Carter, title=As the Networks Order New Shows, Fox Moves to Consolidate Its Gains, work=New York Times
, passage=Virginia Heffernan, Times TV critic, reports from this week's TV upfronts , where the networks debut their new schedules. }}
To bring to the fore; to place up front for consideration
* {{quote-book, 1997, Christopher Hall et al., Silence: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, chapter=Silent and silenced voices, isbn=3110154595, editor=Adam Jaworski, page=204, pageurl=http://books.google.com/books?id=OM4ueFfoRfcC&pg=PA204
, passage=What our analysis has, hopefully, upfronted is the importance to resuscitate the suppressed and silenced voices so as to show the powerful mechanisms of institutional "cases".}}
As adjectives the difference between upfront and prepaid
is that upfront is honest, frank and straightforward while prepaid is paid for in advance.As verbs the difference between upfront and prepaid
is that upfront is to bring to the fore; to place up front for consideration while prepaid is past tense of prepay.As an adverb upfront
is beforehand.As a noun upfront
is a meeting of network executives with the press and major advertisers, signaling the start of advertising sales for a new season.upfront
English
Alternative forms
* up-frontAdjective
(en adjective)Adverb
(-)- He's a poor defender, so we always play him upfront .
Noun
(en noun)citation
