Precedents cases a case previously decided that serves as a legal guide for the resolution of subsequent cases.
"Repealed" applies to legislation, not to precedents set by legal cases. The Thirteenth Amendment (1865), making slavery illegal, overturned the precedent set in the Dred Scottcase.Case Citation:Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 US 393 (1857)
Precedents are the cells that a formula uses. Say you have the following formula in a cell: =A2+C12-D10 Then the cells A2, C12 and D10 are the precedents of the formula. The formula is using values that are in them. You use Trace Precedents to find those cells and highlight them on the Spreadsheet. If you are having a problem with formulas you can highlight the cells to be able to see which ones are being used. One way of doing it is to select the cell and then press the CTRL key and also the [ key. You can also use the Auditing toolbar to do it.
No, overturned itself is not a prefix. However over is a prefix that means excessive.
(A precedent is a previous case that sets an example, notably in law. The plural is precedents, which should not be confused with the homophone precedence, which is the state of superiority or higher rank.)"There were several precedents for the legal ruling in the case."
precedents
Yes.
Precedents
No, it is not. It is the past tense and past participle of the transitive or intransitive verb (to overturn) and can be used as an adjective (e.g. an overturned ruling, an overturned vehicle).
by allowing unconstitutional laws to be challenged and overturned
state law would be overturned it it violated the constitution
i dont no