prior - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

The adjective is a learned borrowing from Latin prior (“earlier, former, previous, prior; in front; (figurative) better, superior”), from Proto-Italic *priōs (“earlier, previous”, literally “more before”), ultimately from *pri (“before”) (from Proto-Indo-European *pró (“leading to, toward”) and its etymon *per- (“before, in front; first”)) + *-jōs (suffix forming comparative adjectives). Doublet of before, fore, and former.[1][2]

The adverb and noun are derived from the adjective.[1][3]

prior (not comparable)

  1. Coming before in order or time; earlier, former, previous.
    Synonyms: advance, antecedent, anterior; see also Thesaurus:former
    His prior residence was smaller than his current one.
    I had no prior knowledge you were coming.
  2. More important or significant.
  3. (Bayesian statistics) Chiefly in prior probability: of the probability of an event: determined without knowledge of the occurrence of other events that bear on it, before additional data is collected.
    Antonym: posterior

more important or significant

prior (comparative more prior, superlative most prior)

  1. Chiefly followed by to: in advance, before, previously.
    Synonyms: ago, hitherto
    The doctor had known three months prior.
    • 2019 April 14, Alex McLevy, “Winter is Here on _Game of Thrones_’ Final Season Premiere (Newbies)”, in The A.V. Club[1], archived from the original on 18 December 2020:
      From the opening shots of the anonymous young Winterfell boy rushing to catch a glimpse of Jon Snow and Queen Daenerys Targaryen, hearkening back to those moments of the very first episode in which Arya rushed to do the same with an approaching King Robert Baratheon, the series is calling back to its beginning, suggesting (at least for now) that the wheel continues to turn, sending us back into a pattern begun seven seasons prior.

prior (plural priors)

  1. (Bayesian statistics) A prior probability distribution, that is, one determined without knowledge of the occurrence of other events that bear on it, before additional data is collected. [from 20th c.]
    Antonym: posterior
    1. (by extension) In the rationalsphere: a belief supported by previous evidence or experience that one can use to make inferences about the future.
      • 2022 July 29, Dan Roller, “Maran Partners Fund Q2 2022 Letter”, in Seeking Alpha[2], archived from the original on 8 December 2022:
        During each of these touchpoints, I'm asking myself where and how my thesis on each holding could be wrong. I'm checking each data point as it comes in against my priors. I'm comparing management behavior to what I would be doing if I were in their shoes.
      • 2022 November 8, Alex Shephard, “The Cards were always Stacked against Democrats”, in Michael Tomasky, editor, The New Republic[3], New York, N.Y.: The Republic Publishing Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 4 October 2023:
        The votes are in, and our priors are confirmed. The truth is that midterms are nearly as predictable as death and taxes: The party that controls the White House always loses and often badly at that.
  2. (Canada, US, law enforcement, chiefly in the plural) A previous arrest or criminal conviction on someone's criminal record. [from 19th c.]
    Synonym: antecedent

in the rationalsphere: belief supported by previous evidence or experience that one can use to make inferences about the future

From Middle English priour, prior (“head or deputy head of a monastery or other religious house; predecessor; superior”),[4] from Old English prior, from Anglo-Norman priour, prior, priur, and Old French prior, priur (modern French prieur), and directly from their etymon Latin prior (“ancestor; predecessor”) (whence Late Latin prior (“superior of a religious house or order; abbot; deputy abbot; head of a guild”)), a noun use of prior (“former, previous, prior”, adjective): see etymology 1.[5]

prior (plural priors)

  1. (Christianity) A high-ranking member of a religious house or religious order.
    1. In an abbey, the person ranking just after the abbot, appointed as his deputy; a prior claustral.
      (abbot’s deputy): Synonyms: dean, provost
      • 1532, Thomas More, “The Confutacion of [William] Tyndale’s Aunswere […]. The Eyght Booke in which is Confuted Doctour [Robert] Barnes Church.”, in Wyllyam Rastell [_i.e._, William Rastell], editor, The Workes of Sir Thomas More Knyght, […], London: […] Iohn Cawod, Iohn Waly, and Richarde Tottell, published 30 April 1557, →OCLC, page 791, column 1:
        It is not yet an hundred yere a goe, ſince that ſame mayſter doctour was butler in the ſame houſe, whereof I was maiſter and praiour: […]
    2. The head of a priory (“a monastery which is usually a branch of an abbey”), or some other minor or smaller monastery; a prior conventual.
      Coordinate term: prioress
    3. The head friar of a house of friars.
    4. The head of the Arrouaisian, Augustinian, and formerly Premonstratensian religious orders.
    5. An honorary position held by a priest in some cathedrals.
      • 1856, James Anthony Froude, “The Parliament of 1529”, in History of England from the Fall of Wolsey to the Death of Elizabeth, volume I, London: John W[illiam] Parker and Son, […], →OCLC, pages 216–217:
        [I]t hath appertained to the Archbishops of Canterbury and York for the space of four hundred years or thereabouts to have spiritual jurisdiction over all your Grace's subjects dwelling within the provinces; […] in the meantime of vacation the same privilege resteth in the churches of Canterbury and York; and is executed by the prior, dean and chapter of the said churches; […]
  2. (historical)
    1. A chief magistrate of the Republic of Florence (1115–1569) in what is now Italy.
      • 1673, John Ray, “Of Venice”, in Observations Topographical, Moral, & Physiological; Made in a Journey through part of the Low-countries, Germany, Italy, and France: […], London: […] John Martyn, printer to the Royal Society, […], →OCLC, page 184:
        [F]irſt of all among themſelves of the ancienteſt they chuſe three heads or chiefs vvhich they call Priors; and alſo of the youngeſt among them they chuſe tvvo vvho perform the office of Secretaries. The Priors ſit dovvn, having before them a table upon vvhich are placed tvvo balloting boxes of that ſort that are uſed in the Great Council; in one of vvhich are put 40 balls, marked vvith a certain mark, that no deceit may be uſed. The reſt of the 41 ſit alſo dovvn, each vvhere he pleaſes. […] Then they are called one by one before the three Priors, and each one vvrites in his Schedule the name of him vvhom he vvould have to be Duke, and leaves it upon the table.
    2. The elected head of a guild of craftsmen or merchants in some countries in Europe and South America.
  3. (obsolete)
    1. A person who is the earliest or most prominent in a field; the chief.
    2. (business) The head of a company.

in an abbey, the person ranking just after the abbot, appointed as his deputy

head friar of a house of friars

head of the Arrouaisian, Augustinian, and formerly Premonstratensian religious orders

honorary position held by a priest in some cathedrals

chief magistrate of the Republic of Florence

elected head of a guild of craftsmen or merchants in some countries in Europe and South America

  1. 1.0 1.1 Compare “prior, adj., adv., and n.2”, in OED Online Paid subscription required⁠, Oxford: Oxford University Press, December 2023.
  2. ^ prior1, adj.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
  3. ^ prior1, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
  4. ^ prī̆ǒur, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
  5. ^ prior, _n._1”, in OED Online Paid subscription required⁠, Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2023; “prior2, n.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.

Borrowed from Latin priōrem.

prior m (plural priors, feminine priora, feminine plural priores)

  1. prior (a high-ranking member of a monastery)

From Proto-Italic *priōs, from earlier *prijōs, from *pri + *-jōs, thus the comparative degree of Old Latin *pri (“before”), from Proto-Italic *pri from Proto-Indo-European *préy (“before”).

prior (comparative, neuter prius, no positive form, superlative prīmus); third declension

  1. former, prior, previous, earlier (preceding in time)
    priore anno ― the year before, the previous year; during the year before
    priore aestate ― the previous summer
    priore nocte ― the previous night
    • 27 BCE – 25 BCE, Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 26.1:
      Q. Fuluio Ap. Claudio, prioris anni consulibus, prorogatum imperium est atque exercitus quos habebant decreti, adiectumque ne a Capua quam obsidebant abscederent priusquam expugnassent.
      The military authority of Quintus Fulvius and Appius Claudius, consuls of the previous year, was extended and the armies which they had were decided upon, and it was added as a proviso that they should not withdraw from Capua, which they were besieging, until they conquered it.
  2. the first, the original
  3. in front
  4. (figuratively) better, superior
    • 29 BCE – 19 BCE, Vergilius, Aeneis 4.321–323:
      “[...] tē propter eundem / exstīnctus pudor et, quā sōlā sīdera adībam, / fāma prior. [...]”
      “Likewise, because of you, my sense of honor is gone, and a better reputation which was my only way to the stars.”
      (As a widow, Dido's chastity and devotion to the memory of her first husband would have been well-regarded in Augustan Rome.)
  5. (substantive, Medieval Latin) abbot, prior

Learned borrowing from Latin prior.

prior m pers

  1. (dated, religion) prior (a person of authority in an organization)
  2. (historical) prior (a high ranking official in medieval Italy)

prior

  1. genitive of priora

From Latin prior.

prior m (plural priores, feminine priora or prioresa, feminine plural prioras or prioresas)

  1. (Catholicism) prior (superior of a religious or military order.)

From Latin prior.

prior m (plural priores, feminine priora, feminine plural prioras)

  1. prior (a high-ranking member of a monastery)