precurse
English
Etymology
From Latin praecursum, supine of praecurrō (“run before”).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /pɹɨˈkɜɹs/
Verb
precurse (third-person singular simple present precurses, present participle precursing, simple past and past participle precursed)
- (transitive) To forerun or precede.
- 1987, Shrikant Jichkar, Explorations in Economic Theory of Socialism, page 151,
- It is true that competition in capitalism precurses new economic order.
- 1994, Herbert A. Kirst, 5: Semi-Synthetic Derivatives of 16-Membered Macrolide Antibiotics, Gwynn Pennant Ellis, David K. Luscombe (editors), Progress in Medicinal Chemistry, Volume 31, page 278,
- As one example, precursing a strain of S. ambofaciens with an aglycone of tylosin while blocking production of spiramycin with cerulenin yielded hybrid macrolides named chimeramycins, which combined structural elements of both tylosin and spiramycin [152].
- 2006, Johan Muller, On the shoulders of giants: verticality of knowledge and the school curriculum, Rob Moore, Madeleine Arnot, John Beck, Harry Daniels (editors), Knowledge, Power and Educational Reform, page 23,
- The only way this can be intelligible is by conceiving that school maths competence ‘precurses’ (Gee, 2001) university maths competence, which ‘precurses’ real maths adeptness. […] After all, this idea of the interpenetration of symbolic competence is built into Bernstein's explanation of how the middle-class home code precurses its young into the school code better than does the working-class home code.
- 2010, Charles E. Needham, Blast Waves, page 233,
- I will use the Priscilla event as a representative example of a thermally precursed blast wave from a nuclear detonation.
- 1987, Shrikant Jichkar, Explorations in Economic Theory of Socialism, page 151,
Noun
precurse (plural precurses)
- (archaic) A prediction, a prognostication.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Shakespeare to this entry?)
Anagrams
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