The rule presupposes a need to restrict student access to the library.
the book presupposes its readers will already know something about the subject
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Although the same dimensions of character underpin business and religious leadership, these dimensions of character do not presuppose a specific set of values, beliefs, policies, or perspectives.—Mary Crossan, Forbes.com, 8 May 2025 Many of a citizen’s fundamental decisions—whether to vote, whether to follow the law—presuppose a democratically legitimate state.—Andrew Marantz, New Yorker, 28 Apr. 2025 If Braun can ever be healthy, and this ranking presupposes that, Minnesota has so many long, versatile forwards/wings and is a modern basketball fan’s dream.—Sabreena Merchant, New York Times, 7 Apr. 2025 This presupposes a whole number of other technologies, some of which were fairly esoteric prior to the AI boom; for example, digital twins and synthetic data.—Ruth Foxe Blader, Forbes.com, 17 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for presuppose
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, from Middle French presupposer, from Medieval Latin praesupponere (perfect indicative praesupposui), from Latin prae- + Medieval Latin supponere to suppose — more at suppose
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