/ˈɪntɹoʊ/
OriginClipping of introduction, from Latin intrōductiō (“lead-in, introduction”) – the abbreviation removes the second part of the compound; the first part ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₁énteros (“inner, what is inside”). The demoscene sense comes from the fact that they were originally prepended to pirated copies of computer games.
- informalAn introduction.
- informalThe opening sequence at beginning of a film, television program, etc.
- A small demo produced to promote one's demogroup or for a competition.
“If the rules specify that the DLLs' size will be added to the 64K limit, there's not a lot of space to code an intro.”
“Are there any sites that have original copies of games? (ie: Summer/Winter/World Games with Fast Loading). Just looking for games without the trainers/intros.”
“Games, demos, intros. They were the same, this was the scene. The trend was that you cracked and made demos and intros.”
- informal, transitiveTo introduce.
Formsintros(plural) · intros(present, singular, third-person) · introing(participle, present) · introed(participle, past) · introed(past)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0