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succeed
[suhk-seed]
verb (used without object)
to happen or terminate according to desire; turn out successfully; have the desired result.
Our efforts succeeded.
Antonyms: failto thrive, prosper, grow, or the like.
Grass will not succeed in this dry soil.
Antonyms: failto accomplish what is attempted or intended.
We succeeded in our efforts to start the car.
Antonyms: failto attain success in some popularly recognized form, as wealth or standing.
The class voted him the one most likely to succeed.
Antonyms: failto follow or replace another by descent, election, appointment, etc. (often followed byto ).
to come next after something else in an order or series.
verb (used with object)
to come after and take the place of, as in an office or estate.
to come next after in an order or series, or in the course of events; follow.
Antonyms: precede
succeed
/ səkˈsiːd /
verb
(intr) to accomplish an aim, esp in the manner desired
he succeeded in winning
(intr) to happen in the manner desired
the plan succeeded
(intr) to acquit oneself satisfactorily or do well, as in a specified field
to succeed in publishing
to come next in order (after someone or something)
to take over an office, post, etc (from a person)
he succeeded to the vice presidency
to come into possession (of property, etc); inherit
(intr) to have a result according to a specified manner
the plan succeeded badly
(intr) to devolve upon
the estate succeeded to his son
Other Word Forms
- succeedable adjective
- succeeder noun
- succeedingly adverb
- succeeding adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of succeed1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Other men who served in the Sudan included John French, the first commander of the British Expeditionary Force in France, and Douglas Haig, who succeeded him from December 1915 until the armistice.
Early forms likely slipped through the undergrowth beneath the feet of dinosaurs and succeeded by evolving a variety of strategies for capturing prey.
“We’re just trying to find little edges in a game if we can to be better and to help us succeed,” Stafford said.
The research, published on November 24 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, indicates that this subtle gene flow may help dogs succeed in many different human environments.
He was succeeded by Starmer, who dragged the party back to the centre and returned it to power in July 2024 after 14 years in opposition.
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