Once the new president took office, she used her power to supercede the edicts of the incompetent vice president.
The new contract will supersede all previous versions.
(By the way, I'm glad to see that you have spelt it correctly. Too many people misspell it as 'supercede'!)
They superseded the old statue with the new one.
The school was getting old, so they superseded it with a new one.
The fifth edition contained safety instructions that superseded all of those in previous editions.
This mandate will supersede the previous order.
The correct spelling is supersede.An example sentence is "nobody could supersede his father's place".
The word supersede is a verb (to supercede: to replace) and would have no plural. The conjugation for the present tense, third-person singular is supercedes, and the third-person plural is supersede. Supercessions
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This mandate will supersede the previous order.
I will supersede on my swimming test.
Supersede is correct English word whereas supercede is what American's generally use. Supercede is misspelt supersede.
The senior Judge was superseded by a Judge junior to Him.
The word supersede has a long e sound. The definition of supersede is to take the position or place of or to force out of use because it is inferior. The first known use of the word was in 1654.
The correct spelling is supersede.An example sentence is "nobody could supersede his father's place".
Supersede means to replace with a new.
you spell it supersede supersede as in: a : to cause to be set aside b : to force out of use as inferior c : to take the place or position d : to displace in favor of another
The word is correctly spelled supersede. However, common use of the spelling variant supercede in many cases exceeds the use of the original spelling. So it may be said that supersede has been superseded by supercede.Dating from Middle English, the spelling supercedenfollowed the French spelling with a C (as in precede) rather than the S form seen in Latin.
"Supersede" is a verb that means "to take the place of/ to take over/ to overthrow/ to remove".
The word supersede is a verb (to supercede: to replace) and would have no plural. The conjugation for the present tense, third-person singular is supercedes, and the third-person plural is supersede. Supercessions
Taking the place of, to replace in power or authority, to cause to set aside