grammaticality - Pre-requisite vs prerequisite - English Language . . . Instance 1 - "Prerequisite" in search: "Prerequisite for" vs "prerequisite to" Instance 2 - "Pre-requisite" in search: Single word for "This task cannot proceed until these other tasks are completed first"? I suppose it's a bit of a broader question: Words seem to have "pre-" prepended to indicate action or applicability before something
Hyphenation of prerequisite - English Language Usage Stack Exchange I'm proofreading my thesis, and found that TeX in its infinite wisdom had decided to hyphenate prerequisite as pre-req-ui-site I've replaced it with pre-re-qui-si-te, but I'm a bit unsure what the proper hyphenation is and couldn't find any good sources
Under what circumstances should I use requisite and required? Thanks for the detailed and useful answer (+1) However, I'm not entirely swayed by the argument that 'required' should be used becuase it is used more often Does this mean that: 1 The are completely interchangeable, or 2 There are circumstances contexts where it is more appropriate to use 'Requisite' If the latter is true, what are these circumstances contexts?
differences - Precondition vs. prerequisite - English Language . . . A prerequisite, on the other hand, is a process by itself that must have been achieved and completed before the next process starts In the example you cite, the precondition must be true but is not necessarily a completed process or it may have other co-requisite ingredients or conditions The latter part of the sentence is definitely more
antonym of pre-requisite - English Language Usage Stack Exchange Word for opposite of *prerequisite*? Something that is possible because of another thing? (15 answers) Closed 9 years ago must steps required before a particular tasks are called pre-requisite what do we call must steps which should be followed after a particular task post-requisite is not a valid English word i guess , is there replacement ??