Prey - meaning and definition. What is Prey
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What (who) is Prey - definition

2006 VIDEO GAME
Prey (Computer Game); Prey (computer game); PREY; Enisi; SphereOS; Prey video game
  • A screenshot from the final build of the game showing the main character "Domasi Tawodi" a.k.a. "Tommy"
  • A screenshot from the 1997 build of the game showing the main character "Talon Brave"
  • Artwork depicting the Sphere as viewed from space
  • A puzzle featuring wall-walking

prey         
  • [[Social predator]]s: [[meat ant]]s cooperate to feed on a [[cicada]] far larger than themselves.
  • echolocation]] to hunt moths at night.
  • San]] hunter, Botswana
  • Rome]]
  • The [[chameleon]] attacks prey by shooting out its tongue.
  • Riparian willow recovery at Blacktail Creek, [[Yellowstone National Park]], after reintroduction of wolves, the local [[keystone species]] and [[apex predator]].<ref name="Ripple2004"/> Left, in 2002; right, in 2015
  • A basic [[foraging]] cycle for a predator, with some variations indicated<ref name=Kramer2001/>
  • Spider wasps]] paralyse and eventually kill their hosts, but are considered [[parasitoid]]s, not predators.
  • Wolves]], [[social predator]]s, cooperate to hunt and kill [[bison]].
  • [[Seven-spot ladybird]]s select plants of good quality for their [[aphid]] prey.
  • Lotka–Volterra model]]<!-- with the parameters set to (1.1, 0.4, 0.4, 0.1)-->
  • Eastern coral snake]], itself a predator, is venomous enough to kill predators that attack it, so when they avoid it, this behaviour must be inherited, not learnt.
  • alt=A line graph of the number of Canada lynx furs sold to the Hudson's Bay Company on the vertical axis against the numbers of snowshoe hare on the horizontal axis for the period 1845 to 1935
  • Relation of predation to other feeding strategies
  • The [[black-browed albatross]] regularly flies hundreds of kilometres across the nearly empty ocean to find patches of food.
  • ''[[Paramecium]]'', a predatory [[ciliate]], feeding on [[bacteria]]
BIOLOGICAL INTERACTION WHERE A PREDATOR FEEDS ON A PREY ORGANISM
Predation/Old; Predatory; Predator (biology); Predate; Natural predator; Prey; Prey animal; Predator and prey; Predator; Natural enemy; True predation; True predator; Predaceous; Predated; Predating; Predator-prey; Size-selective predation; Size selective predation; Predations; Preys; Preying; Preyed; Raptatory; Predacious; Predators; Opportunist predator; Predatory insect; Predator–prey; Social predation; Stalk (zoology); Coevolution of predators and prey; Predation in ecosystem survival; Biological predation; Prey (biology); Obligate predator; Predatory behavior
(preys, preying, preyed)
1.
A creature's prey are the creatures that it hunts and eats in order to live.
Electric rays stun their prey with huge electrical discharges...
These animals were the prey of hyenas.
N-UNCOUNT-COLL: usu with poss
see also bird of prey
2.
A creature that preys on other creatures lives by catching and eating them.
The larvae prey upon small aphids.
= feed
VERB: V on/upon n
3.
You can refer to the people who someone tries to harm or trick as their prey.
Police officers lie in wait for the gangs who stalk their prey at night...
N-UNCOUNT: usu with poss
4.
If someone preys on other people, especially people who are unable to protect themselves, they take advantage of them or harm them in some way.
The survey claims loan companies prey on weak families already in debt.
VERB: V on n [disapproval]
5.
If something preys on your mind, you cannot stop thinking and worrying about it.
He had been unwise and it preyed on his conscience.
= weigh
VERB: V on n
Prey         
  • [[Social predator]]s: [[meat ant]]s cooperate to feed on a [[cicada]] far larger than themselves.
  • echolocation]] to hunt moths at night.
  • San]] hunter, Botswana
  • Rome]]
  • The [[chameleon]] attacks prey by shooting out its tongue.
  • Riparian willow recovery at Blacktail Creek, [[Yellowstone National Park]], after reintroduction of wolves, the local [[keystone species]] and [[apex predator]].<ref name="Ripple2004"/> Left, in 2002; right, in 2015
  • A basic [[foraging]] cycle for a predator, with some variations indicated<ref name=Kramer2001/>
  • Spider wasps]] paralyse and eventually kill their hosts, but are considered [[parasitoid]]s, not predators.
  • Wolves]], [[social predator]]s, cooperate to hunt and kill [[bison]].
  • [[Seven-spot ladybird]]s select plants of good quality for their [[aphid]] prey.
  • Lotka–Volterra model]]<!-- with the parameters set to (1.1, 0.4, 0.4, 0.1)-->
  • Eastern coral snake]], itself a predator, is venomous enough to kill predators that attack it, so when they avoid it, this behaviour must be inherited, not learnt.
  • alt=A line graph of the number of Canada lynx furs sold to the Hudson's Bay Company on the vertical axis against the numbers of snowshoe hare on the horizontal axis for the period 1845 to 1935
  • Relation of predation to other feeding strategies
  • The [[black-browed albatross]] regularly flies hundreds of kilometres across the nearly empty ocean to find patches of food.
  • ''[[Paramecium]]'', a predatory [[ciliate]], feeding on [[bacteria]]
BIOLOGICAL INTERACTION WHERE A PREDATOR FEEDS ON A PREY ORGANISM
Predation/Old; Predatory; Predator (biology); Predate; Natural predator; Prey; Prey animal; Predator and prey; Predator; Natural enemy; True predation; True predator; Predaceous; Predated; Predating; Predator-prey; Size-selective predation; Size selective predation; Predations; Preys; Preying; Preyed; Raptatory; Predacious; Predators; Opportunist predator; Predatory insect; Predator–prey; Social predation; Stalk (zoology); Coevolution of predators and prey; Predation in ecosystem survival; Biological predation; Prey (biology); Obligate predator; Predatory behavior
·noun The act of devouring other creatures; ravage.
II. Prey ·noun To take booty; to gather spoil; to Ravage; to take food by violence.
III. Prey ·noun That which is or may be seized by animals or birds to be devoured; hence, a person given up as a victim.
IV. Prey ·noun Anything, as goods, ·etc., taken or got by violence; anything taken by force from an enemy in war; spoil; booty; plunder.
prey         
  • [[Social predator]]s: [[meat ant]]s cooperate to feed on a [[cicada]] far larger than themselves.
  • echolocation]] to hunt moths at night.
  • San]] hunter, Botswana
  • Rome]]
  • The [[chameleon]] attacks prey by shooting out its tongue.
  • Riparian willow recovery at Blacktail Creek, [[Yellowstone National Park]], after reintroduction of wolves, the local [[keystone species]] and [[apex predator]].<ref name="Ripple2004"/> Left, in 2002; right, in 2015
  • A basic [[foraging]] cycle for a predator, with some variations indicated<ref name=Kramer2001/>
  • Spider wasps]] paralyse and eventually kill their hosts, but are considered [[parasitoid]]s, not predators.
  • Wolves]], [[social predator]]s, cooperate to hunt and kill [[bison]].
  • [[Seven-spot ladybird]]s select plants of good quality for their [[aphid]] prey.
  • Lotka–Volterra model]]<!-- with the parameters set to (1.1, 0.4, 0.4, 0.1)-->
  • Eastern coral snake]], itself a predator, is venomous enough to kill predators that attack it, so when they avoid it, this behaviour must be inherited, not learnt.
  • alt=A line graph of the number of Canada lynx furs sold to the Hudson's Bay Company on the vertical axis against the numbers of snowshoe hare on the horizontal axis for the period 1845 to 1935
  • Relation of predation to other feeding strategies
  • The [[black-browed albatross]] regularly flies hundreds of kilometres across the nearly empty ocean to find patches of food.
  • ''[[Paramecium]]'', a predatory [[ciliate]], feeding on [[bacteria]]
BIOLOGICAL INTERACTION WHERE A PREDATOR FEEDS ON A PREY ORGANISM
Predation/Old; Predatory; Predator (biology); Predate; Natural predator; Prey; Prey animal; Predator and prey; Predator; Natural enemy; True predation; True predator; Predaceous; Predated; Predating; Predator-prey; Size-selective predation; Size selective predation; Predations; Preys; Preying; Preyed; Raptatory; Predacious; Predators; Opportunist predator; Predatory insect; Predator–prey; Social predation; Stalk (zoology); Coevolution of predators and prey; Predation in ecosystem survival; Biological predation; Prey (biology); Obligate predator; Predatory behavior
¦ noun an animal hunted and killed by another for food.
?a victim or quarry.
?archaic plunder or (in biblical use) a prize.
¦ verb (prey on/upon)
1. hunt and kill for food.
2. exploit or injure.
cause constant distress to: the problem had begun to prey on my mind.
Derivatives
preyer noun
Origin
ME: the noun from OFr. preie, from L. praeda 'booty', the verb from OFr. preier, based on L. praedari 'seize as plunder', from praeda.

Wikipedia

Prey (2006 video game)

Prey is a first-person shooter video game developed by Human Head Studios, under contract for 3D Realms, and published by 2K Games, while the Xbox 360 version was ported by Venom Games. The game was initially released in North America and Europe on July 11, 2006. Prey uses a heavily modified version of id Tech 4 to use portals and variable gravity to create the environments the player explores.

The game's story is focused on Cherokee Domasi "Tommy" Tawodi as he, his girlfriend, and grandfather are abducted aboard an alien spaceship known as The Sphere as it consumes material, both inanimate and living, from Earth in order to sustain itself. Tommy's Cherokee heritage allows him to let his spirit roam freely at times and come back to life after dying, which gives Tommy an edge in his battle against the Sphere.

Prey had been in development in one form or another since 1995, and has had several major revisions. While the general approach to gameplay, including the use of portals, remained in the game, the story and setting changed several times. The game received generally positive reviews, with critics praising its graphics and gameplay but criticizing its multiplayer component for a lack of content.

Prey was a commercial success, selling more than one million copies in the first two months of its release and leading to the abortive development of its sequel Prey 2. The rights to Prey passed on to Bethesda Softworks, who released an unrelated game of the same name, developed by Arkane Studios, in 2017.

Examples of use of Prey
1. But still the rubble refused to relinquish its prey.
2. The balance between predator and prey means that when the numbers of prey decrease, the numbers of predators decrease as well.
3. "These good citizens that are driving these cabs, they are not going to be prey, easy prey for people who intend to do wrong," Anderson said.
4. Even organic cereals fall prey to her watchful eye.
5. This rarely happens now; the predators have become the prey.