"Precede" has a long e sound. "Maneuver" and "magistrate" have a short e sound.
The word "precede" has the long e sound, pronounced as "pre-ceed."
Like many English words, it comes from Latin. (When you see the prefix "pre-", that means "before"). Precede comes from the Latin words meaning to go before (prae cedere).
I was about to precede the driving test but the car went out of control :)
preconception premature precede predict prepare prefix
No, precede is a verb.
"Precede" is a verb.
There is no homophone for the word precede.
The patient is prohibited from urinating at least two hours before the procedure.
Precede Obviously!
Her shower should precede going to bed. Precede describes something that comes before another thing in time or in order.
The cat allowed me to precede him through the door.