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supersede
[ soo-per-seed ]
verb (used with object)
- to replace in power, authority, effectiveness, acceptance, use, etc., as by another person or thing.
- to set aside or cause to be set aside as void, useless, irrelevant, or obsolete, usually in consideration of something mentioned:
The success of the vaccine superseded the necessity of a smallpox hospital, and the enterprise was abandoned almost as soon as conceived.
- to succeed to the position, function, office, etc., of; supplant.
supersede
/ ˌsuːpəˈsiːdʒə; ˌsuːpəˈsiːd; ˌsuːpəˈsɛʃən /
verb
- to take the place of (something old-fashioned or less appropriate); supplant
- to replace in function, office, etc; succeed
- to discard or set aside or cause to be set aside as obsolete or inferior
Derived Forms
- ˌsuperˈseder, noun
- supersedure, noun
- ˌsuperˈsedence, noun
- supersession, noun
- ˌsuperˈsedable, adjective
Other Words From
- su·per·sed·a·ble adjective
- su·per·sed·er noun
- un·su·per·sed·ing adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of supersede1
Word History and Origins
Origin of supersede1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
They would not, for example, supersede federal law regarding the Establishment Clause in the First Amendment.
Sport does have this incredible power to supersede current affairs and politics.
Netanyahu is meanwhile scrambling to supersede the Plessner committee with intra-coalition negotiations conducted by himself.
A view of the duchess's ball-room, or of the dining-table of the earl, will supersede all occasion for lengthy fiddle-faddle.
There is to be no sovereign power, great or small, other than American, and tribal wards are to supersede dattoships.
By the act, which it was intended to supersede, all foreign sugar was subjected to a duty of 63s.
Led astray by party spirit, the ministers sent Admiral Pigot, a mere nonentity, to supersede Rodney.
It is destined to supersede the one, and to introduce the other.
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