0 present participle of presuppose
1 to accept that something is true before it has been proved:
[ + that ] You're presupposing that he'll have told her - but he may not have.
Investigative journalism presupposes some level of investigation.
[ + that ] All this presupposes that he'll get the job he wants.
More marked has come to mean ' less informative than ', or else ' accentuating ' (61) affirmative statements either by presupposing them or by correcting them.
We continue to use for a context of such assumptions, again presupposing that all variables labelling hypotheses in a judgment are distinct.
Presupposing a market largely made up of business users makes the task a little easier.
In this case, the reputation argument attempts to establish present optimality by presupposing future optimality.
That being so, it is obvious that one cannot do grammar without presupposing both semantic structures and phonetic material.
Because of the overall small numbers, the zero anaphors were counted with the pronouns and represent the ' more presupposing ' referential expressions.
There is no way to establish the primacy of certain rules of validation without presupposing the privilege of the system to which they belong.
It is the very characteristics of research that it continually changes goals rather than presupposing them, all claims to the contrary notwithstanding.