If A
requires B
, then B
is the requirement. In this relationship what is A
?
In this context, I'm describing academic courses where B
is a course that fulfills the requirements for course A
.
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Related: english.stackexchange.com/questions/109995– RegDwigнtCommented Jun 18, 2013 at 14:12
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What is the context? A purchase? A contract?– bibCommented Jun 18, 2013 at 14:13
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You could say A is the "dependent". Could you get away with calling it a "contingent"?– James M. LayCommented Nov 21, 2014 at 9:04
2 Answers
At my university (in the United States Midwest), one would say "ECE 700 (A) is a follow-on course to ECE 600 (B)" and while this implies that B is a prerequisite, it doesn't necessarily require it.
(In my department at least, prerequisites were pretty flexible: transfer students, grad students, and students from other departments---as well as those just plain motivated---could very easily get them waived, so avoiding the suggestion of strict requirements was usually intended.)
B is a prerequisite of A. That is common terminology for students registering for classes.
adj. Required or necessary as a prior condition: Competence is prerequisite to promotion.
n. Something that is prerequisite, as a course that is required prior to taking an advanced course.
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1But the question is what word designates A's relationship to B? Commented Jun 18, 2013 at 14:42
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2
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@StoneyB, Oooh...you're actually correct. I guess I addressed the OP's second sentence, but not the actual question. A class that has prerequisites might be called an advanced, more advanced, or upper level class.– JLGCommented Jun 18, 2013 at 17:05