Advertisement
Advertisement
prepossess
[ pree-puh-zes ]
verb (used with object)
- to possess or dominate mentally beforehand, as a prejudice does.
- to prejudice or bias, especially favorably.
- to impress favorably beforehand or at the outset.
prepossess
/ ˌpriːpəˈzɛs /
verb
- to preoccupy or engross mentally
- to influence in advance for or against a person or thing; prejudice; bias
- to make a favourable impression on beforehand
Word History and Origins
Origin of prepossess1
Example Sentences
He was not a physically prepossessing young fellow.
Even the British explorer Sir Richard Francis Burton wasn’t immune: “Truly prepossessing was our first view of the then mysterious island of Zanzibar,” he wrote in “Zanzibar: City, Island, and Coast” in 1872.
It was the first time in his life he had been summoned to a principal’s office for disciplinary reasons and he did not find the circumstances prepossessing in any way.
McLEAN, Va. — The campaign manager spoke about her candidate’s race with a veteran’s prepossessing self-assurance.
She was by all accounts a prepossessing woman, with flaxen, pompadoured hair and blue eyes.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse