fast forward
See also: fast-forward
English
Alternative forms
Verb
fast forward (third-person singular simple present fast forwards, present participle fast forwarding, simple past and past participle fast forwarded)
- (transitive) To cause an audio or video tape, digital media stream, etc. to move forward very fast, so that when the device is played, it will start at a later point.
- (intransitive) To be fast-forwarded; to move ahead in this fashion.
- (intransitive, figuratively, by extension) To shift one's attention or focus toward a later point in time.
- 2012, Alan D. Hemmings, Donald R. Rothwell, Karen N. Scott, Antarctic Security in the Twenty-First Century, page 77:
- Antarctica was remote, little of value […] was at stake, and few states had the capacity to get to Antarctica or otherwise challenge the claimants. […] Fast-forward to the present, and the picture looks somewhat different.
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- (transitive, by extension) To accelerate.
- 2019 May 30, Karen Weintraub, “Crispr gene-editing will change the way Americans eat – here's what's coming”, in The Guardian:
- Lippman said Crispr is an incredibly useful tool in research, allowing him to ask new questions of the tomato plants he breeds, by fast-forwarding the research process. “The amount of genetics that we’re currently able to do has at least quintupled in the last three years,” he said.
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Antonyms
Translations
to cause media to roll fast
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Noun
fast forward (countable and uncountable, plural fast forwards)
Antonyms
See also
References
- “fast forward”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
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