"Precessor" is a word in ENGLISH
A predecessor.
The moral of the story is even though that seemed like the end of the world back then, right now I can look back on it and laugh. And if anyone is going through something similar right now just know it will get better.
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Q: Why are violas so large?A: It is an optical illusion. It's not that the violas are large, just that the viola player's heads are so small.
A senior; an elder; a predecessor.
Read the complete definitionOne who goes before; a predecessor.
Read the complete definitionIn Scotch law. A writ commanding a person to enter heir to his predecessor within forty days, otherwise an action …
Read the complete definitionA figure in which the parts of a sentence or paragraph are so arranged that each succeeding one rises above …
Read the complete definitionFrom a remote time; from an ancestor or predecessor; from one to another in a descending line.
Read the complete definitionAn aged person; one who lived at an earlier period; a predecessor.
Read the complete definitionOne who goes before another; a predecessor; hence, an ancestor' a progenitor.
Read the complete definitionA predecessor; an ancestor.
Read the complete definitionOne who precedes; one who has preceded another in any state, position, office, etc.; one whom another follows or comes …
Read the complete definitionone who goes or bas gone before; the correlative of “successor.” Applied to a body politlc or corporate, in the …
Read the complete definitionOne who reigns before another; a sovereign predecessor.
Read the complete definitionA game similar to whist, and the predecessor of it.
Read the complete definitionLands and tenements which were not heid by knight-service, nor by grand serjeanty, nor by petit, hut by simple servlces; …
Read the complete definitionThe power or right of succeeding to the station or title of a father or other predecessor; the right to …
Read the complete definitionOne who succeeds or follows; one who takes the place which another has left, and sustains the like part or …
Read the complete definitionLatin: In Roman law. The praetor, on his accession to office, did not usually publish an entirely new edict but …
Read the complete definition