prededuct
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]prededuct (third-person singular simple present prededucts, present participle prededucting, simple past and past participle prededucted)
- To deduct beforehand.
- 1992, Allen I. Janis, John R. Porter, Recent Advances in General Relativity, →ISBN, page 114:
- The semicolon denotes two-dimensional covariant differentiation, and the separately conserved electrostatic stress-energy contribution has been prededucted from 1.
- 2015, Robert Ignatius Burns, Medieval Colonialism: Postcrusade Exploitation of Islamic Valencia, →ISBN:
- Vives was to prededuct a salary of 950 solidi yearly for the governing castellan, Arnold of Fores.