The cat allowed me to precede him to the door.
I was about to precede the driving test but the car went out of control :)
To precede something or someone is to come before it. A sentence using this word would be: At the event tomorrow, the parade with precede lunch.
No, precede is a verb.
Precede is the realizations of sequence -precede is coming before something else. Proceed is a verb with action - keep going.
(A predecessor is a person previously in the definable position another now occupies.) "The mayor strongly criticized the spending policies of his predecessor." "Her predecessor had been lax in supervising the employees."
The cat allowed me to precede him through the door.
Her shower should precede going to bed. Precede describes something that comes before another thing in time or in order.
An in depth discussion of the bill should precede our signing of it.
In the alphabet, A precedes Z.
I was about to precede the driving test but the car went out of control :)
Yes, a comma should precede "i.e." when it is used in a sentence to introduce an explanation or clarification.
The word precede (pree-SEED) has two long E sounds.
To precede something or someone is to come before it. A sentence using this word would be: At the event tomorrow, the parade with precede lunch.
The letter "a" precedes the letter "b" in the alphabet.
Her stunning radiance always seems to precede her entrance into any room.
The covert operations will only precede the overt operations by six months.
Precede is a verb.