Yes. Example sentence:
The president presided over the meeting.
The phrase "is presided by" is technically incorrect. The correct phrase is "is presided over by." The word "preside" is a transitive verb, and it requires the preposition "over" to indicate the person or entity in charge. Therefore, it should be written as "is presided over by" for grammatical accuracy.
John Hancock presided over the first, and George Washington presided over the second.
John Hancock presided over the first, and George Washington presided over the second.
There is a children's rime which goes:There were ten in the bed, and the little one said: "Roll over, roll over!"So ten in the bed is a correct usage in English.
. Who presided over the Congress Were first -
...Mr. X presided over the meeting.
"Two of them have sent" is correct usage.
Charles V, the Holy Roman Emperor, presided over the trail of Martin Luther.
In medieval Europe poor peasants worked the land, presided over by rich nobles.
The last party conference that Stalin presided over was in 1953 before his death.
No, "got ran over" is not correct. The appropriate phrase is "got run over," as "run" is the past participle of "to run." The correct usage maintains proper grammatical structure in passive constructions.
President Barack Obama has presided over the largest budget deficit in any single year. He has presided over five of the largest in history. His highest was at $1.296791 trillion in 2011.