The AI-powered English dictionary
comparative more ready-made, superlative most ready-made
Pre-existing or made previously and suitable for use without (further) preparation or modification; comparable with regard to the amount of preparation required. quotations examples
Incidentally, they became mindful of the meaning of thrift and waste and learned to practice an economy of material and operations which was not elicited in the play with the more ready-made educational material.
1937, Association for Childhood Education International, Childhood Education, volume 14, page 35
The periods of massive revivals, especially the Awakenings, and spiritual movements in Protestant America in general seem the most ready made to attract Africans to Christianity.
1993, Leslie Howard Owens, Commentary to Bill C.Malone, Blacks and Whites and the Music of the Old South, Ted Ownby (editor), Black and White, page 185
The potlatch was perhaps the most ready-made container for explaining the gospel and the kingdom of God, in all its counterintuitiveness, to native people.
2010, Mark Buchanan, Spiritual Rhythm: Being with Jesus Every Season of Your Soul, page 131
(not comparable) Made in advance to a standard specification. quotations examples
During the 1830s and 1840s, ready-made standardized shoes and clothing increasingly challenged the custom-made products of small handicraft workshops.
1993, Ronald Aminzade, Ballots and Barricades: Class Formation and Republican Politics in France, 1830-1871, page 68
Commercial use of these machines was enhanced by the development of a system of proportional measurements and subsequently of proportional sizes, making feasible ready-made clothing on a mass scale.
2000, Diana Crane, Fashion and Its Social Agendas: Class, Gender, and Identity in Clothing, page 75
The Tees Valley already produces more than 50% of all the hydrogen in the UK so it makes sense to bring it [hydrogen fuelling] here because you've already got a ready-made supply.
2020 January 2, Graeme Pickering, “Fuelling the changes on Teesside rails”, in Rail, page 57
Made or prepared in advance and used regularly or habitually without original thought. quotations examples
[…] including both the most everyday and popular, the most ready-made or found objects, the most quotidian of performances.
2008, Elizabeth A. Grosz, Chaos, Territory, Art: Deleuze and the Framing of the Earth, page 4, footnote
plural ready-mades
A ready-made object. examples