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premise

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premise

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++prem·ise /ˈpremɪs/ ●●○ W3 noun  1 premises [plural] the buildings and land that a shop, restaurant, company etc uses 〔商店、餐馆、公司等使用的〕房屋及土地 Schools may earn extra money by renting out their premises. 学校通过出租房屋场地可以获取额外收入。 business premises 企业经营场所off the premises The manager escorted him off the premises. 经理把他送出门外。on the premises The wonderful desserts are made on the premises. 那些美味的甜点是现场制作的。2 [countable] (also premiss British English)IDEA a statement or idea that you accept as true and use as a base for developing other ideas 前提 The idea that there is life on other planets is the central premise of the novel. 其他星球存在生命这一观点是这部小说的核心前提。premise that the premise that an accused person is innocent until they are proved guilty 在证明有罪之前被告无罪的前提
Examples from the Corpus
premiseThis section too starts with a premise, which is that individual pupils are active participants in their own education.The basic premise is that they think they know better than anyone else.I believe his whole argument is based on a false premise.The first premise is that humans are wanting animals whose needs depend on what they already have.The important thing is the premise, the theoretical first step.American justice works on the premise that an accused person is innocent until they are proved guilty.But so far, the first two episodes have been bogged down with setting up the premise and too many location scenes.The Prime Minister I agree with the premise underlying my hon. Friend's question.The underlying premise of the global market ideology is that every country will earn most of its income from exports.premise thatAnd the action premise that completes this credo may seem totally ridiculous in these troubled times.His question is old-fashioned, rational and optimistic in its premise that technology should be at the service of enlightenment.But the original premise that all statements are either empirical or analytical is itself in neither of these categories.The program is based on the premise that drug addiction can be cured.The present research is based on the premise that family style of emotional expression is a key factor in this respect.If that many did indeed die, I would question the premise that most of them were innocent.The model of the post-heroic leader that we discussed earlier is certainly based upon the premise that individuals will respond to encouragement.
Origin premise (1300-1400) French prémisse, from Medieval Latin praemissa, from Latin praemittere to place ahead
prem·ise nounChineseSyllable
buildings shop, and etc a restaurant, land company Corpus the that


premise
premise W3 /ˈpreməs, ˈpremɪs/ noun
 Date: 1300-1400
 Language: French
 Origin: prémisse, from Medieval Latin praemissa, from Latin praemittere 'to place ahead'
1. premises [plural] the buildings and land that a shop, restaurant, company etc uses:
    Schools may earn extra money by renting out their premises.
    business premises
    off the premises
    The manager escorted him off the premises.
    on the premises
    The wonderful desserts are made on the premises.
2. [countable] (also premiss British English) a statement or idea that you accept as true and use as a base for developing other ideas:
    The idea that there is life on other planets is the central premise of the novel.
    premise that
    the premise that an accused person is innocent until they are proved guilty


prem·ise (BrE also , less frequent prem·iss) BrE /ˈpremɪs/ 🔊NAmE /ˈpremɪs/ 🔊 noun (formal) a statement or an idea that forms the basis for a reasonable line of argument 前提;假定the basic premise of her argument她的论证的基本前提a false premise错误的前提His reasoning is based on the premise that all people are equally capable of good and evil. 他的推理是以人可以为善亦可以为恶为前提的。🔊🔊