Presuppose in a sentence as a verb

The piece seems to presuppose how I write code and that always rubs me the wrong way.

Doesn't your question presuppose that the height distribution tables reset every year?

Most business schools presuppose and existing, successful business of some sort.

You presuppose that hostility is necessary to conveying a point.

Arguments of the form "debuggers are easier than hacked-up logging" always presuppose that the "hacked-up logging" is hard to do.

His argument for "if you use a lock you did something wrong" seems to presuppose that somebody else created handy concurrent data structures for you.

But the law would be unenforceable.>> Information always finds a way to propagate.> Doesn't this presuppose that no secret has ever been kept?Valid point.

To presuppose that any theoretical aliens have sin is wholly unwarranted.

If you're going to presuppose that abortion is killing someone, then your conclusion is logically apparent and uncontroversial.

No philosopher worth her salt would try to answer this question as formed because of the large number of buried assumptions in it that presuppose the form of the correct answer, and that answers not meeting that form are, by definition, incorrect.

Doesn't using the Moon's helium-3 presuppose that we're capable of creating energy-positive helium-3 reactions here on Earth?Though at the pace we're headed back to the Moon now, we're probably about on target to match the perennially thirty-year-off working fusion reactor.

Empirically, communism is only possible as the act of the dominant peoples “all at once” and simultaneously, which presupposes the universal development of productive forces and the world intercourse bound up with communism.

Wow, what an incredibly dense thing to presuppose and advice others that the idea of data normalisation is antiquated because the primary purpose, when it was "thought of", was to save disk space!Data normalisation is all about correctness - mathematical correctness.

Moreover, the mass of propertyless workers – the utterly precarious position of labour – power on a mass scale cut off from capital or from even a limited satisfaction and, therefore, no longer merely temporarily deprived of work itself as a secure source of life – presupposes the world market through competition.

First of all, the Christian theological vision of redemption incorporates a much broader view of humanity than one individual's salvation from damnation, it shares much in common with the Marxist view of the end of history in that it also puts hope on a stable everlasting peace and prosperity, where the "lion will lay down with the lamb".I'm not advocating for Christian theology at all, but it would be foolish not to see the Universalist connections between Marxism and Christianity, they both have a vision for the "end of history".So even if the Pope weren't engaging Marx on his own terms here, speaking plainly of a Materialist redemption, which it appears he is doing, his Christian theology would presuppose a good deal of shared understanding in Marx's hope for Utopia.

Presuppose definitions

verb

take for granted or as a given; suppose beforehand; "I presuppose that you have done your work"

See also: suppose

verb

require as a necessary antecedent or precondition; "This step presupposes two prior ones"

See also: suppose