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Therefore, race relations were again a priority issue-albeitin a different way.
2
Now public health can be priority number one-thanksto plentiful number two.
3
However, the priority of each use case varies with different endemic settings.
4
They were given 20 possible factors to place in order of priority.
5
Councillor George Wood said their main priority was to ensure public safety.
1
Projects that included the necessary financing would be given precedence, he said.
2
If Rule One and Two come into conflict, Rule One takes precedence.
3
Meanwhile, Sino-U.S. trade tensions continued to take precedence in global financial markets.
4
Courting popularity in politics invariably takes precedence over planning for rainy days.
5
We learned the order of precedence for troops in the communication trenches.
1
There is no precedency in a French assembly except amongst the Military.
2
In that of the Royalists, they dispute for precedency, and amuse themselves.
3
None jostle with him for the wall, or pick quarrels for precedency.
4
In a review of Italian literature, Dante has a double claim to precedency.
5
He speaks most of the precedency of age, and protests fortune the greatest virtue.
1
The ogive is, perhaps, very ancient; and authors dispute as to the anteriority of the Romanesque to the Gothic.
2
This anteriority of nature is a commonplace in philosophy: thus one says that the decrees of God have an order among themselves.
1
Some may be near unto goodness who are conceived far from it; and many things happen not likely to ensue from any promises of antecedencies.
Usage of antecedence in English
1
It's not only the sins that are visited upon you if you take the details of your antecedence seriously.
2
The chief principle, then, of savage science is that antecedence and consequence in time are the same as effect and cause.
3
I must necessarily set out from the one, to which therefore I give hypothetical antecedence, in order to arrive at the other.
4
And a posteriori, it will be proved by the principle itself when it is discovered, as involving universal antecedence in its very conception.
5
Secondly, it may be referred to the very nature of the action itself: that is, forasmuch as predestination implies antecedence and gratuitous effect.
6
Moreover, it must be observed that, although the participle "predestinated," just as this participle "made," implies antecedence, yet there is a difference.
7
3: Further, just as that which has been made was not always, so also that which was predestinated; since predestination implies a certain antecedence.