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Definitions

prepotent

[pree-poht-nt] / priˈpoʊt nt /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Without these most prepotent needs met, people do not even get an opportunity for further growth as a human.

From Scientific American • Sep. 24, 2017

Perhaps not since the full-blown Garbo has the old world offered to the new such a prepotent image of the eternal feminine as can be seen in the mysteriously soulful face of Maria Schell.

From Time Magazine Archive

By prepotent we mean having unusual power to transmit characters to offspring.

From The Dollar Hen by Hastings, Milo M. (Milo Milton)

We have here, therefore, either almost complete sterility between varieties of different colours, or a prepotent effect of pollen from a flower of the same colour, bringing about the same result.

From Darwinism (1889) by Wallace, Alfred Russel

And, of course, the more primitive a type is, the more prepotent it is.

From The Rising Tide of Color Against White World-Supremacy by Stoddard, Lothrop