Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
preception .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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She had also, in spite of preceptions been striclly constitutional on issues such as Gay rights, and was moderate on issues such as climate and renewable energy.
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Business decisions are based upon preceptions on better or worse levels of Sales in the Intermediate term.
Kydland and Prescott win Nobel, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty 2009
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A master architect, I suspect, must throw out as much writing as they revise their preceptions of the novel (I refuse to believe that anyone is capable of completeing a creative work about which they knew everything that would arise), just not fleshy prose.
Writer Unboxed » Blog Archive » Pantsers versus Architects 2007
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The rest danced with their preceptions of what they believe the general population wanted to hear rather than simply stating the truth.
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The impact of male and female leaders on the group performance, morale, and preceptions of West Point cadets (Technical report 404) by Robert Wayne Rice
OpEdNews - Quicklink: First female nominated to become four-star 2008
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It will also improve donor and investor preceptions.
Malawi shines 2007
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The "wise" here being those mired in self-imagined cleverness, while the babes equating with Blake's men whose doors of preceptions are cleansed.
Good starts ... Frank Wilson 2007
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We are talking about feelings and preceptions here, not what is actually occuring.
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Mickle -We are talking about feelings and preceptions here, not what is actually occuring.
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Mickle -We are talking about feelings and preceptions here, not what is actually occuring.
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