Yes, a colon can precede the word "because" when introducing an explanation, a list, or a summary of information. It is a common punctuation usage in formal writing to provide clarity and emphasis on the reason or cause that follows.
There is no homophone for the word precede.
The word "precede" has the long e sound, pronounced as "pre-ceed."
The correct spelling of the word is precede (come before).The similar word meaning "to continue" is proceed.
The root word of "precedent" is "precede," which comes from the Latin word "praecedere," meaning "to go before" or "to precede."
The word that can precede "stream" and "side" is "river."
There is no homophone for the word precede.
The cat allowed me to precede him through the door.
precede
A colon placed after the word including is not correct; this is because a colon should follow only independent clauses, which cannot end with that particular word. In other words, if you can correctly write a period in place of the colon, the colon's use is correct.
The cat allowed me to precede him to the door.
Qadam (קדם) means "to precede"
The correct spelling of the word is precede (come before).The similar word meaning "to continue" is proceed.
no
I was about to precede the driving test but the car went out of control :)
sound
Boxing
precede