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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Prepossession

Prepossession \Pre`pos*ses"sion\, n.

  1. Preoccupation; prior possession.
    --Hammond.

  2. Preoccupation of the mind by an opinion, or impression, already formed; preconceived opinion; previous impression; bias; -- generally, but not always, used in a favorable sense; as, the prepossessions of childhood. ``The prejudices and prepossessions of the country.''
    --Sir W. Scott.

    Syn: Bent; bias; inclination; preoccupancy; prejudgment. See Bent.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
prepossession

1640s, noun of action from prepossess (v.).

Wiktionary
prepossession

n. 1 preoccupation; having possession beforehand. 2 A preconceived opinion, or previous impression; bias, prejudice.

WordNet
prepossession
  1. n. the condition of being prepossessed; "the king's prepossession in my favor is very valuable"

  2. an opinion formed beforehand without adequate evidence; "he did not even try to confirm his preconceptions" [syn: preconception, parti pris, preconceived opinion, preconceived idea, preconceived notion]

Usage examples of "prepossession".

Nevertheless, despite her prepossessions against us both, there was in her temper something so gentle, meek, and unupbraiding, that even the sense of injustice lost its sting, and one could not help loving the softness of her character, while one was most chilled by its frigidity.

This greatly displeased Bonaparte, who was very charitably informed of it in order to check his prepossession in favour of the men of the old Court, such as the Comte de Segur, and at a later period Comte Louis de Narbonne.

O mighty and enduring force of early associations, that almost seems, in its unconquerable strength, to partake of an innate prepossession, that binds the son to the mother who concealed him in her womb and purchased life for him with the travail of death?

We all conceived a prepossession in his favour, for there was a sterling quality in this laugh, and in his vigorous, healthy voice, and in the roundness and fullness with which he uttered every word he spoke, and in the very fury of his superlatives, which seemed to go off like blank cannons and hurt nothing.

I suppose it is a natural prepossession of mankind to take people as though they were homogeneous.

That princess had imbibed a strong prepossession against the French nation, particularly against Charles, the author of all the calamities which, from her earliest infancy, had befallen her family.

The French courtiers readily embraced a fiction which their sovereign thought it his interest to adopt: Perkin, both by his deportment and personal qualities, supported the prepossession which was spread abroad of his royal pedigree: and the whole kingdom was full of the accomplishments, as well as the singular adventures and misfortunes, of the young Plantagenet.

He seems only to have contracted, from his education, and from the genius of the age in which he lived, too much of a narrow prepossession in matters of religion, which made him incline somewhat to bigotry and persecution: but as the bigotry of Protestants, less governed by priests, lies under more restraints than that of Catholics, the effects of this malignant quality were the less to be apprehended if a longer life had been granted to young Edward.

She was zealously attached to the church of England from conviction rather than from prepossession, unaffectedly pious, just, charitable, and compassionate.

However, with all his foibles, he is a charming creature, and prepossession only can blind you to his merit.

The fairest observers misconstrue all motives to action, where any received prepossession has found an hypothesis.

Visit of the Westwyns to Sir Hugh shewed Lavinia in so favourable a light, that nothing less than the strong prepossession already conceived for Camilla could have guarded the heart of the son, or the wishes of the father, from the complete captivation of her modest beauty, her intrinsic worth, and the chearful alacrity, and virtuous self-denial, with which she presided in the new oeconomy of the rectory.

I spare the reader a narration of the terrible struggles which nature, conscience, all scruples and prepossessions of education and of blood, held with this resolution, the unholiness of which I endeavoured to clothe with the name of justice to Isora.

Her prepossessions are reasonable, but are easily removed by telling the truth.

The dramatist must share the prepossessions of his audience, the example of Lope de Vega and Shakespeare is there to prove it, and at his boldest he can do no more than put into words what they from cowardice or laziness have been contented only to feel and not to express.