runthrough
English
    
    Etymology
    
Deverbal from run through.
Noun
    
runthrough (plural runthroughs)
- Alternative form of run-through.
- 1991, Lynn M. Soeby, Way Off Broadway:- You've had the first runthrough of a complicated, multifaceted musical production and it's hanging together.
 
- 1994, Harold Clurman, Marjorie Loggia, Glenn Young, The Collected Works of Harold Clurman, page 439:- There are generally three to five runthroughs at which the director feels his company is ready to be criticized by "outsiders." A large or small audience of friends may be invited to the last two of the runthroughs.
 
- 2002, Cecilia E. Ford, Barbara A. Fox, Sandra A. Thompson, The Language of Turn and Sequence, page 148:- Emerging in the feedback phase of a larger conference presentation rehearsal activity, this general kind of negative observation is a linguistic resource deployed by Ron, the principal research investigator, to communicate what he considers to have been relevant omissions in the presentation runthrough.
 
 
Adjective
    
runthrough (not comparable)
- Alternative form of run-through.
- 1973, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce. Subcommittee on Surface Transportation, Northeastern Railroad Transportation Crisis, page 932:- Much of D. & H. joint service is conducted by runthrough train operations, which eliminate terminal delay.
 
- 1976, American Association of Railroad Superintendents, Proceedings and Committee Reports of Annual Meeting, page 26:- One of the advantages of Conrail certainly is in runthrough trains.
 
 
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