If you prepare or plan something ahead, you do it some time before a future event so that everything is ready for that event to take place. The government wants figures that help it to plan ahead Summer weddings need to be arranged months ahead
If you are ahead in your work or achievements, you have made more progress than you expected to and are performing well. First half profits have charged ahead from £127.6m to £134.2m Children in small classes are several months ahead in reading
ahead ADVERB USES ; In addition to the uses shown below, ahead is used in phrasal verbs such as `get ahead', `go ahead', and `press ahead'
Ahead also means in the future. A much bigger battle is ahead for the president Now I can remember without mourning, and begin to look ahead
If you go ahead, or if you go on ahead, you go in front of someone who is going to the same place so that you arrive there some time before they do. I went ahead and waited with Sean
You use ahead with verbs such as `push', `move', and `forge' to indicate that a plan, scheme, or organization is making fast progress. We are moving ahead with plans to send financial aid = forward
If a person or a team is ahead in a competition, they are winning. Scotland were ahead in their European championship qualifier in Iceland A goal would have put Dublin 6-1 ahead
Something that is ahead is in front of you. If you look ahead, you look directly in front of you. Brett looked straight ahead I peered ahead through the front screen The road ahead was now blocked solid Ahead, he saw the side railings of First Bridge over Crooked Brook. behind