supercede
Verb

supercede (supercedes, present participle superceding; past and past participle superceded)

  1. Misspelling of supersede
    • 1857, The American Law Register — On the Doctrine of Uses as an Element of our Law of Conveyances, Vol. 6, № 2/3:
      To it a new species of conveyancing owes its origin, which dispenses with livery of seisin, and almost entirely supercedes, in practice, the employment of common law deeds.
    • 2000, Juliet Floyd & Hilary Putnam, The Journal of Philosophy — A Note on Wittgenstein’s “Notorious Paragraph” about the Godel Theorem, Vol. 97, № 11:
      They saw themselves as providing a freestanding “ideal language” or “concept-language,” what W. V. Quine has called a first-grade conceptual scheme, which in some sense supercedes ordinary language.
    • 2002, Amy Kapczynski, The Yale Law Journal — Queer Brinksmanship: Citizenship and the Solomon Wars, Vol. 112, № 3:
      The DoD may contend that the consolidated Solomon Amendment, passed in 1999, National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000 § 549, supercedes the regulations.



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