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Preliminary

Preliminary is an adjective meaning preceding or introductory; it describes actions, steps, information, or structures that come before a main part. It can indicate provisional or preparatory status. As a noun, a preliminary refers to an event, document, or investigation that precedes the principal one, such as preliminary rounds, preliminary remarks, or preliminary examinations.

In law, a preliminary hearing or examination is held to determine whether there is enough evidence to

In sports and competitions, preliminaries or prelims are early rounds used to reduce a field to finalists

In research, planning, and design, preliminary work includes pilot studies, feasibility assessments, or initial designs that

Etymology: preliminary comes from Latin prae- meaning before and limen meaning threshold, through French or English

proceed
to
trial.
It
is
not
a
determination
of
guilt
or
innocence.
The
exact
form
and
authority
of
preliminary
proceedings
vary
by
jurisdiction;
some
systems
use
preliminary
inquiries,
grand
juries,
or
pre-trial
conferences.
or
to
seed
entrants.
They
may
be
timed,
scored,
or
judged,
and
outcomes
determine
eligibility
for
later
stages.
inform
a
main
project.
Preliminary
data
and
analyses
are
often
reported
with
caveats,
since
methods
or
sample
sizes
may
change
in
subsequent
stages.
development.
The
term
emphasizes
prior
steps
that
prepare
for
the
main
activity,
event,
or
analysis.
It
is
commonly
used
across
disciplines
to
signal
that
results
or
actions
are
provisional
and
subject
to
refinement.