Usually, it has one of two senses: It can mean “preoccupied, absorbed in” – “He was too prepossessed to notice the interruption.” Or it can mean “biased” (usually favorably): “The judge is prepossessed in the plaintiff’s favor.”
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Usually, it has one of two senses: It can mean “preoccupied, absorbed in” – “He was too prepossessed to notice the interruption.” Or it can mean “biased” (usually favorably): “The judge is prepossessed in the plaintiff’s favor.”
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