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| | adjective | 1. Deliberate; intentional. |
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| | | "The bird seemed to swoop down at my cat with a prepense hostility." |
| | | "My grandson had a prepense plan to distract me while his brother grabbed the cookies." |
| | | "The prosecution sought to show that the defendant committed the crime with malice prepense." |
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| Middle English, mid-17th century |
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| "Prepense" is based on the Anglo-Norman French term "prépensé," meaning "thought of in advance." A dated usage of this adjective is as a synonym for "intentional," but it still has a place in legal vocabulary. ... | Continue Reading |
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