prevailing
adj/pɹɪˈveɪ.lɪŋ/US
Etymology
By surface analysis, prevail + -ing.
Definitions
Predominant
Predominant; of greatest force.
- The prevailing opinion was for additional planning time.
- He has a Humour more prevailing than his Curioſity, and will willingly diſpence with the hearing of one ſcandalous Story, to avoid giving an occaſion to make another, by being ſeen to walk with his Wife.
Prevalent, common, widespread.
- Fever and dysentery are the most prevailing diseases in this division, more particularly the latter, which is one of the most destructive amongst the troops in India, and particularly so in the European constitution.
- One of the most prevailing defects in this people is their invincible indolence, and hatred of labour, which has, at all times, paralysed the government of their best princes, and impeded the success of their most brilliant enterprises.
- In Sydney at 9 am, by far the most prevailing wind is a westerly, particularly during the colder two-thirds of the year.
present participle and gerund of prevail
The neighborhood
- synonymubiquitous
- synonymwidespread
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for prevailing. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA