Since the issue had never been dealt with before, the judge's ruling set a precedent for how future courts would view the issue.
The precedent man wanted everyone to know that he changed the law.
the predicate of the sentence is usually called the verb in elementary school
The word 'precedent' is a noun, a word for an earlier event or action that is regarded as an example; a decision by a court on which future decisions are based.A noun functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example: The ruling set a precedent for cases of this kind. (direct object of the verb 'set')
Obama gave a precendent to African American People to run for President.
This to a large extent sets a precedent for the rest of the exhibition
The Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines "precedent" as "prior in time, order, arrangement, or significance." Example sentences include:George Washington established a precedent for future presidents to followJim set a new precedent by being the first person to lick his own elbow
The root word of "precedent" is "precede," which comes from the Latin word "praecedere," meaning "to go before" or "to precede."
No, there is no reason to capitalize 'precedent' (which should actually be the form 'precedence' as used here) in your sentence. The word precedent is a common noun; for it to be a proper noun and a need to capitalize it, it would have to be the name or title of someone or something specific. The term 'One on One Call' appears to be the name of a specific group and is therefor a proper noun and it should be capitalized. Your sentence should read: If both of the meetings conflict, the sales meeting will take precedence over the One on One Call.
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The use of "gonna" instead of "going to" is a common colloquialism in American English.
"Precedent" means coming before, something which precedes. In law it means a past decision in a similar case.
Precedent