Preceded
verb (used with object), preceded, preceding.
1.
to go before, as in place, order, rank, importance, or time.
2.
to introduce by something preliminary; preface:
to precede one’s statement with a qualification.
verb (used without object), preceded, preceding.
3.
to go or come before.
noun
4.
Journalism. copy printed at the beginning of a news story presenting late bulletins, editorial notes, or prefatory remarks.
verb
1.
to go or be before (someone or something) in time, place, rank, etc
2.
(transitive) to preface or introduce
Read Also:
- Precedence
noun 1. act or fact of preceding. 2. the right to precede in order, rank, or importance; priority. 3. the fact of preceding in time; antedating. 4. the right to precede others in ceremonies or social formalities. 5. the order to be observed in ceremonies by persons of different ranks, as by diplomatic protocol. noun […]
- Precedence lossage
/pre’s*-dens los’*j/ A misunderstanding of operator precedence resulting in unintended grouping of arithmetic or logical operators when coding an expression. Used especially of mistakes in C code due to the nonintuitively low precedence of “&”, “|”, “^”, “>”. For example, the following C expression, intended to test the least significant bit of x, x & […]
- Precedences
noun 1. act or fact of preceding. 2. the right to precede in order, rank, or importance; priority. 3. the fact of preceding in time; antedating. 4. the right to precede others in ceremonies or social formalities. 5. the order to be observed in ceremonies by persons of different ranks, as by diplomatic protocol. noun […]
- Precedency
noun, plural precedencies. 1. precedence.
- Precedent
noun 1. Law. a legal decision or form of proceeding serving as an authoritative rule or pattern in future similar or analogous cases. 2. any act, decision, or case that serves as a guide or justification for subsequent situations. Synonyms: example, model, pattern, standard. adjective, precedent 3. going or coming before; preceding; anterior. noun (ˈprɛsɪdənt) […]