Prerequisite in a sentence as a noun

Javascript is a prerequisite of the modern web.

That is when you need to take care of yourself first, because that's a prerequisite for a relationship.

The way I interpreted the book was that the 10,000 hours of practice was simply a prerequisite to becoming the Beatles.

Then you need to take care of your relationship because that's a prerequisite for a working family of two parents and one or more kids.

But my point is that changing public opinion of tough-on-crime policies is a prerequisite for getting Oritz fired.

Whenever I talk at my old university, I always tell people that dropping out is by no means a rite of passage or prerequisite to success.

Some number of Project Euler problems should be a prerequisite before techniques for organizing code are even mentioned.

Prerequisite in a sentence as an adjective

If more people knew about Iteratee, it would be worth spending more time talking about the connections and contrasts, but they don't, and knowledge of it is not prerequisite to understanding reducers.

The fact that a formal engineering/MBA education isn't a prerequisite for business success is almost a tautology now, especially among software startups.

"In other words, feeling responsibility for everything around you is a necessary prerequisite for agency.

A somewhat related note is that America's culture of sex-negativity, shame and general hysteria around nudity is a required prerequisite for this type of bullying and abuse.

The recent increase in reliance on college as a prerequisite for many office and knowledge worker jobs is more of an indication of the failure of the public K-12 education system than of the beneficial qualities of college.

Perhaps they only count as 'vulnerabilities' when they're practically exploitable, and practical exploitation has as an absolute prerequisite, discovery by malicious actors.

Prerequisite definitions

noun

something that is required in advance; "Latin was a prerequisite for admission"

See also: requirement

adjective

required as a prior condition or course of study