Preamble Meaning in English
word
Definition
A preamble is an introduction to a speech, document, or a law that explains its purpose or the reasons for what follows.
Usage & Nuances
"Preamble" is formal and most often used for legal or official documents, such as constitutions. It isn't used for casual introductions. Common phrase: "the preamble to the Constitution." Not to be confused with "preface" (for books).
Spanish: preámbuloPortuguese (BR): preâmbuloPortuguese (PT): preâmbuloChinese (Simplified): 序言 - 前言Chinese (Traditional): 序言 - 前言Hindi: उपोद्घात - भूमिकाArabic: تمهيدBengali: প্রস্তাবনাRussian: преамбулаJapanese: 前文 - 序文(法律用語)Vietnamese: lời nói đầu (văn bản pháp luật) - phần mở đầu (văn bản trang trọng)Korean: 전문 (법률 등 공식 문서의) - 서문 (공식적인 경우)Turkish: başlangıç kısmı (resmi belge) - önsöz (resmî/hukuki)Urdu: دیباچہ - تمہید (قانونی/رسمی متن)Indonesian: lời nói đầu (văn bản pháp lý) - phần mở đầu (trang trọng)
Example Sentences
Let’s skip the preamble and get straight to the point.
natural
The preamble of the Constitution explains its main goals.
basic
He read the preamble before starting the speech.
basic
Every law has a preamble to describe its purpose.
basic
Without the preamble, the document would be hard to understand.
natural
The lawyer pointed out a mistake in the preamble to the agreement.
natural