precurse
/pɹɪˈkɜɹs/
precurse
English
Verb
Ad
Definition
To forerun or precede.
Etymology
English pre- + curse, from Latin praecursum (supine of praecurrō [“run before”]).
Example Sentences
- "It is true that competition in capitalism precurses new economic order."
- "As one example, precursing a strain of S. ambofaciens with an aglycone of tylosin while blocking production of spiramycin with cerulenin yielded hybrid macrolides named chimeramycins, which combined structural elements of both tylosin and spiramycin [152]."
- "The only way this can be intelligible is by conceiving that school maths competence ‘precurses’ (Gee, 2001) university maths competence, which ‘precurses’ real maths adeptness.[…]After all, this idea of the interpenetration of symbolic competence is built into Bernstein's explanation of how the middle-class home code precurses its young into the school code better than does the working-class home code."
Ad