presupposed in English

verb
1
(of an action, process, or argument) require as a precondition of possibility or coherence.
his relationships did not permit the degree of self-revelation that true intimacy presupposes

Use "presupposed" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "presupposed" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "presupposed", or refer to the context using the word "presupposed" in the English Dictionary.

1. In his case, moving into literature presupposed irrevocably breaking away from these origins.

2. The presupposed Congeniality has already been lost, even in old-core urban areas

3. These presupposed not only honest and well-educated people, but an administrative hierarchy, managers, and a system of checks.

4. Butaccording to the classical electromagnetic theory presupposed by Bohr's theory, orbiting electrons should radiate.

5. Previous research presupposed that children remember pieces of information from specific events but generally do not keep episodic memories.

6. 6 Such questions are not only perennially interesting; answers to them are presupposed by much of what counts as human knowledge.

7. It presupposed moral agnosticism and a plurality of meanings, none of which are sacred or compulsory to all.

8. I now prefer to consider it a specialized Adoral seta, presupposed that the rutellum is also a specialized

9. 23 Its usefulness presupposed markets where the lord's agents, or the beneficiaries of lordly gifts, could exchange it for consumables.

10. Compared with the stiff presupposed objectives, the object design of the dialogue instruction features the typical "developing objective" tropism.

11. Its usefulness presupposed markets where the lord's agents, or the beneficiaries of lordly gifts, could exchange it for consumables.

12. Apriorism definition is - belief in a priori principles or reasoning; specifically : the doctrine that knowledge rests upon principles that are self-evident to reason or are presupposed by experience in general.

13. Similarly, those who insist that evolution is a fact base their conclusions on only part of the evidence, and they allow their own presupposed conclusions to influence the way that they view the evidence.

14. Axiomatic adjective self-evident, given, understood, accepted, certain, granted, assumed, fundamental, absolute, manifest, presupposed, unquestioned, indubitable, apodictic or apodeictic It is Axiomatic that as people grow older they become less agile.