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Definition of preside verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

preside

verb
 
/prɪˈzaɪd/
 
/prɪˈzaɪd/
[intransitive] (formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they preside
 
/prɪˈzaɪd/
 
/prɪˈzaɪd/
he / she / it presides
 
/prɪˈzaɪdz/
 
/prɪˈzaɪdz/
past simple presided
 
/prɪˈzaɪdɪd/
 
/prɪˈzaɪdɪd/
past participle presided
 
/prɪˈzaɪdɪd/
 
/prɪˈzaɪdɪd/
-ing form presiding
 
/prɪˈzaɪdɪŋ/
 
/prɪˈzaɪdɪŋ/
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  1. to lead or be in charge of a meeting, ceremony, etc.
    • the presiding judge
    • preside at/over something They asked if I would preside at the committee meeting.
    • (figurative) The party presided over one of the worst economic declines in the country's history (= it was in power when the decline happened).
    Extra Examples
    • Judge Charles Watkins presided over the appeal hearing.
    • The Archbishop presided at a special mass in the city's cathedral.
    Oxford Collocations DictionaryPreside is used with these nouns as the subject:
    • judge
    See full entry
    Word Originearly 17th cent.: from French présider, from Latin praesidere, from prae ‘before’ + sedere ‘sit’.
See preside in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee preside in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
alloy
noun
 
 
From the Topic
Physics and chemistry
C2
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