No, precede is a verb.
false
I was about to precede the driving test but the car went out of control :)
Precede is the realizations of sequence -precede is coming before something else. Proceed is a verb with action - keep going.
A relative pronoun introduces an adjective clause, a clause that modifies its antecedent (a noun, a noun phrase, or a pronoun).The relative pronouns are: who, whom, whose, which, that.Example: The car that she is driving is not hers. ('that she is driving' describes car; 'that' is a relative pronoun)
precede
false
I was about to precede the driving test but the car went out of control :)
Precede is a verb.
There is no homophone for the word precede.
Extremely is an adverb. Adjectives can only describe nouns, and no noun is described as being extremely.
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.
Precede is the realizations of sequence -precede is coming before something else. Proceed is a verb with action - keep going.
The noun forms of the verb to precede are precedence, precedent, and the gerund, preceding.
An in depth discussion of the bill should precede our signing of it.
All numbers from 1 to 998 precede the number 999.