prime - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
- ️Thu Oct 29 1992
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English prime, from Old French prime and its etymon, Latin prīmus (“first”), from earlier prīsmos < *prīsemos < Proto-Italic *priisemos, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *per- (“beyond, before”). Doublet of primo and primus.
The noun sense "apostrophe-like symbol" originates from the fact that the symbol ′ was originally a superscript Roman numeral one.
prime (comparative primer, superlative primest)
- First in importance, degree, or rank.
- First in time, order, or sequence.
- Synonyms: earliest, first, original
Both the English and French governments established prime meridians in their capitals.
1671, John Milton, “Samson Agonistes, […].”, in Paradise Regain’d. A Poem. In IV Books. To which is Added, Samson Agonistes, London: […] J[ohn] M[acock] for John Starkey […], →OCLC, page 21:
I thought it lawful from my forme act, / And the ſame end ; ſtill watching to oppreſs / Iſrael’s oppreſſours : of what now I ſuffer / She was not the prime cauſe, but I my ſelf, / Who vanquiſht with a peal of words (O weakneſs !) / Gave up my fort of ſilence to a Woman.
2013, Ralph Denny, Accounts for Solicitors - Page 33:
The process of recording a transaction in the accounts begins with an entry in what is termed a book of prime entry.
- First in excellence, quality, or value.
1820, Thomas Moore, W. Simpkin, R. Marshall, Jack Randall's Diary of Proceedings at the House of Call for Genius:
Gemmen (says he), you all well know / The joy there is whene'er we meet; / It's what I call the primest go, / And rightly named, 'tis—'quite a treat,' […]
1855 December – 1857 June, Charles Dickens, “The Child of the Marshalsea”, in Little Dorrit, London: Bradbury and Evans, […], published 1857, →OCLC, book the first (Poverty), page 50:
"Is it very pleasant to be there, Bob?" / "Prime," said the turnkey.
1861, Isabella Beeton, Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management:
Average cost, 10d. to 18. per lb. for the primest parts.
- (mathematics, lay) Having exactly two integral factors: itself and unity (1 in the case of integers).
Thirteen is a prime number.
- (mathematics, technical) Such that if it divides a product, it divides one of the multiplicands.
- (algebra, of an ideal) Having its complement closed under multiplication.
- (algebra, of a nonzero module) Such that the annihilator of any nonzero submodule is equal to the annihilator of the whole module.
- Marked or distinguished by the prime symbol.
- Early; blooming; being in the first stage.
1667, John Milton, “Book X”, in Paradise Lost. […], London: […] [Samuel Simmons], and are to be sold by Peter Parker […]; [a]nd by Robert Boulter […]; [a]nd Matthias Walker, […], →OCLC; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books: […], London: Basil Montagu Pickering […], 1873, →OCLC, lines 245–248:
[...] His ſtarrie Helme unbuckl’d ſhew’d him prime / In Manhood where Youth ended ; by his ſide / As in a glittering Zodiac hung the Sword, / Satans dire dread, and in his hand the Spear.
- (obsolete) Lecherous, lewd, lustful.
c. 1603–1604 (date written), William Shakespeare, The Tragœdy of Othello, the Moore of Venice. […] (First Quarto), London: […] N[icholas] O[kes] for Thomas Walkley, […], published 1622, →OCLC, [Act III, scene iii], page 53:
It is impoſſible you ſhould ſee this, / Were they as prime as Goates, as hot as Monkies, / As ſalt as Wolues, in pride; and fooles as groſſe / As ignorance made drunke: [...]
- (having no nontrivial factors): indivisible
- biprime
- pseudoprime
- semiprime
- (having exactly two integral factors): coprime
- almost prime
- book of prime entry
- co-prime
- essential prime implicant
- in prime twig
- non-essential prime implicant
- prime constellation
- prime contract
- prime contractor
- prime cost
- prime cut
- prime-cut
- prime decomposition
- prime directive
- prime factor
- prime factorization
- prime field
- prime formula
- prime gap
- prime ideal
- prime implicant
- prime meridian
- prime minister
- prime ministerial
- prime ministership
- prime ministry
- prime mover
- prime number
- prime-numbered
- prime number theorem
- prime reciprocal magic square
- prime rib
- prime ring
- prime subring
- prime suspect
- prime time
- prime-time
- pump-prime
- relatively prime
- sub-prime
- twin prime pair
first in time, order, or sequence
- Bulgarian: пръв (bg) (prǎv), първоначален (bg) (pǎrvonačalen)
- Chinese:
- Danish: første (da), tidligste
- Dutch: eerste (nl), voornaamste (nl)
- Estonian: esimene (et)
- Finnish: ensimmäinen (fi), ensi-, alku-, primaarinen (fi)
- French: premier (fr)
- German: erste (de)
- Greek: πρώτος (el) (prótos)
- Hungarian: első (hu)
- Irish:
- Italian: primo (it), iniziale (it)
- Japanese: 最初 (ja) (saisho), 第一 (ja) (daiichi)
- Polish: pierwszy (pl)
- Portuguese: primeira (pt) f, primeiro (pt) m
- Russian: перви́чный (ru) (pervíčnyj), пе́рвый (ru) (pérvyj)
- Slovene: prvi (sl)
- Spanish: primero (es)
- Swedish: först (sv), tidigast (sv)
- Turkish: birincil (tr)
- Ukrainian: пе́рший (uk) (péršyj), перви́нний (pervýnnyj)
first in excellence, quality, or value
- Arabic: مُمْتَاز (mumtāz), فَاخِر (fāḵir)
- Bulgarian: превъзходен (bg) (prevǎzhoden)
- Chinese:
- Danish: førsteklasses
- Dutch: uitstekend (nl), prima (nl), beste (nl)
- Esperanto: unuaranga
- Estonian: parim (et)
- Finnish: ensiluokkainen (fi), priima (fi)
- French: de premier ordre (fr), excellent (fr)
- Greek: εκλεκτός (el) (eklektós)
- Hebrew: מצויין m (metsuyán)
- Hungarian: kiváló (hu), príma (hu), kitűnő (hu), remek (hu), ragyogó (hu), nagyszerű (hu)
- Italian: ottimo (it), (meat, cuts) di prima scelta, (foodstuffs) di prima qualità, (livestock) di prima categoria
- Japanese: 最良 (ja) (sairyō), 最高 (ja) (saikō), 第一級 (daiikkyū), 最適 (ja) (saiteki)
- Maori: tetere, pūharu, pūwharu
- Persian: بهترین (fa)
- Polish: pierwszy (pl)
- Portuguese: de primeira
- Russian: превосхо́дный (ru) (prevosxódnyj), первокла́ссный (ru) (pervoklássnyj)
- Slovene: prvovrsten
- Spanish: primo (es), primoroso (es), excelente (es)
- Swedish: förstklassig (sv), prima (sv)
- Ukrainian: першокла́сний (peršoklásnyj)
mathematics: having no factors except itself and unity
- Bulgarian: прост (bg) (prost)
- Catalan: primer (ca)
- Chinese:
- Danish: primtal-
- Dutch: priem (nl)
- Esperanto: prima (eo)
- Estonian: algarv (et)
- Finnish: jaoton
- French: premier (fr)
- German: prim-
- Greek: πρώτος (el) (prótos)
- Hebrew: ראשוני m (rishoní)
- Hungarian: prím (hu)
- Italian: primo (it)
- Japanese: 素数 (ja) (sosū), 素 (ja) (so)
- Maori: toitū
- Polish: pierwsza (pl) f
- Portuguese: primo (pt) m
- Romanian: prim (ro) m
- Russian: просто́й (ru) (prostój)
- Slovene: praštevilo (sl)
- Spanish: primo (es)
- Swedish: prim-
- Tagalog: lantay, balho
- Turkish: asal (tr)
- Ukrainian: просте́ число́ (prosté čysló)
first in importance, degree, or rank
- Bulgarian: главен (bg) (glaven), основен (bg) (osnoven)
- Catalan: principal (ca) m or f, primordial m or f, primari (ca) m, primaria (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Danish: primær (da), hoved- (da), vigtigste
- Dutch: primair (nl), eerste (nl), voornaamste (nl)
- Esperanto: unuaranga
- Finnish: tärkein (fi), pää-
- French: principal (fr)
- Greek: πρωταρχικός (el) (protarchikós)
- Hebrew: ראשי (he) m (rashí)
- Hungarian: elsődleges (hu), fő (hu)
- Ido: precipua (io), primordiala (io)
- Irish:
- Italian: principale (it), (importance) primario (it)
- Japanese: 最重要 (saijūyō) (importance), 第一級 (daiikkyū) (rank, degree)
- Polish: pierwszy (pl)
- Portuguese: primeira (pt) f, primeiro (pt) m, principal (pt)
- Russian: важне́йший (ru) (važnéjšij), гла́вный (ru) (glávnyj), основно́й (ru) (osnovnój)
- Slovene: prvi (sl), prvenstven
- Spanish: principal (es), primordial (es), primario (es)
- Swedish: främst (sv), förnämst (sv), huvud- (sv), viktigast (sv)
- Ukrainian: основни́й (osnovnýj), головни́й (uk) (holovnýj)
mathematics: having its complement closed under multiplication
prime (plural primes)
- (historical) The first hour of daylight; the first canonical hour.
1590, Edmund Spenser, “Book II, Canto IX”, in The Faerie Queene. […], London: […] [John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, →OCLC, page 314:
His larum bell might lowd and wyde be hard,
When cause requyrd, but neuer out of time;
Early and late it rong, at euening and at prime.
- (Christianity) The religious service appointed to this hour.
- (obsolete) The early morning generally.
- (now rare) The earliest stage of something.
1594, Richard Hooker, edited by J[ohn] S[penser], Of the Lawes of Ecclesiastical Politie, […], 3rd edition, London: […] Will[iam] Stansby [for Matthew Lownes], published 1611, →OCLC, book II, page 69:
To this end we see how quickly sundry artes Mechanical were found out in the very prime of the world.
- 1645, Edmund Waller, “To a very young Lady” (earlier title: “To my young Lady Lucy Sidney”) in Poems, &c. Written upon Several Occasions, and to Several Persons, London: H. Herringman, 1686, p. 101,[1]
- Hope waits upon the flowry prime,
- The most active, thriving, or successful stage or period.
1700, [John] Dryden, “Sigismonda and Guiscardo, from Boccace”, in Fables Ancient and Modern; […], London: […] Jacob Tonson, […], →OCLC, page 124:
Short were her Marriage-Joys; for in the Prime, / Of Youth, her Lord expir’d before his time: […]
1813, John Chetwode Eustace, chapter 10, in A Tour through Italy[3], volume 1, London: J. Mawman, pages 225–226:
None but foreigners, excluded by their religion from the cemeteries of the country, are deposited here […] . The far greater part had been cut off in their prime, by unexpected disease or fatal accident.
1965, Bob Dylan (lyrics and music), “Like a Rolling Stone”:
Once upon a time you dressed so fine. You threw the bums a dime in your prime, didn’t you?
- The chief or best individual or part.
- 1726, Jonathan Swift, “To a Lady, who desired the author to write some verses upon her in the heroic style” in The Works of Dr. Jonathan Swift, London: W. Bowyer et al., Volume 7, p. 396,[4]
- Give no more to ev’ry guest
- Than he’s able to digest:
- Give him always of the prime;
- And but a little at a time.
- 1726, Jonathan Swift, “To a Lady, who desired the author to write some verses upon her in the heroic style” in The Works of Dr. Jonathan Swift, London: W. Bowyer et al., Volume 7, p. 396,[4]
- Something which is first in importance or rank: a prime defense company, mortgage lender, etc.
1966, United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Small Business, Hearings, Reports and Prints of the House Select Committee on Small Business, page 60:
I found just as we were fearful we would find that many of the big primes felt that this was a change of policy on the part of the U.S. Government to let the big fellows take care of it, and they were ready to cut back, and in many instances were cutting back […]
- 2023 December 4, Can Palmer Luckey Reinvent the U.S. Defense Industry? - WSJ, The Wall Street Journal:
- The large primes are struggling to do things the way Anduril does, because they're publicly traded companies with an existing investor class that invested in them to be a certain type of company.
- (music) The first note or tone of a musical scale.
- (fencing) The first defensive position, with the sword hand held at head height, and the tip of the sword at head height.
- (algebra, number theory) A prime element of a mathematical structure, particularly a prime number.
2013 July-August, Sarah Glaz, “Ode to Prime Numbers”, in American Scientist, volume 101, number 4:
Some poems, echoing the purpose of early poetic treatises on scientific principles, attempt to elucidate the mathematical concepts that underlie prime numbers. Others play with primes’ cultural associations. Still others derive their structure from mathematical patterns involving primes.
3 is a prime.
- (card games) A four-card hand containing one card of each suit in the game of primero; the opposite of a flush in poker.
- (backgammon) A series of consecutive blocks. A prime of six prevents the opponent's pieces from passing.
I'm threatening to build a prime here.
- The symbol ′ used to indicate feet, minutes, derivation and other measures and mathematical operations.
- (chemistry, obsolete) Any number expressing the combining weight or equivalent of any particular element; so called because these numbers were respectively reduced to their lowest relative terms on the fixed standard of hydrogen as 1.
- An inch, as composed of twelve seconds in the duodecimal system.
- (obsolete) The priming in a flintlock.
1743, Robert Drury, The Pleasant, and Surprizing Adventures of Mr. Robert Drury, during his Fifteen Years Captivity on the Island of Madagascar[5], London, pages 95–96:
[…] he pull’d the Trigger, but Providence being pleas’d to preserve me for some other Purpose, the Cock snapp’d, and miss’d Fire. Whether the Prime was wet in the Pan, or by what other Miracle it was I escap’d his Fury, I cannot say […]
- (film) Contraction of prime lens, a film lens.
- Tomlinson, Shawn M. (2015) Going Pro for $200 & How to Choose a Prime Lens, →ISBN, page 72: “By the time I shifted to my first autofocus film SLR with the Pentax PZ-10, primes were considered things of the past”
- A feather, from the wing of the cock ostrich, that is of the palest possible shade.
- (psychology) A stimulus which causes priming.
- (early morning generally): See Thesaurus:early morning or Thesaurus:morning
- (most active, thriving, or successful stage or period): bloom, blossom, efflorescence, flower, flush, heyday, peak
- (chief or best individual or part): choice, prize, quality, select
- (algebra: prime element of a mathematical structure): prime number (when an integer)
- (A feather, from the wing of the cock ostrich, that is of the palest possible shade.): white
- (antonym(s) of “algebra: prime element of a mathematical structure”): composite
((number theory) Prime element of a mathematical structure, particularly a prime number):
- additive prime
- annihilating prime
- associated prime
- Bell prime
- Carol prime
- Catalan prime
- centered decagonal prime
- centered heptagonal prime
- centered square prime
- centered triangular prime
- Chen prime
- circular prime
- cousin prime
- Cuban prime
- Cullen prime
- delannoy prime
- deletable prime
- dihedral prime
- double factorial prime
- double Mersenne prime
- Eisenstein prime without imaginary part
- emirp
- Euclid-Mullin Sequence prime
- Euclid prime
- Euler irregular prime
- even prime
- factorial prime
- Fermat prime
- Fibonacci prime
- fortunate prime
- Gaussian prime
- generalized Fermat prime base 10
- Genocchi prime
- Gilda's prime
- good prime
- happy prime
- harmonic prime
- Higgs prime for squares
- highly cototient prime
- illegal prime
- irregular prime
- isolated prime
- Kynea prime
- left-truncatable prime
- Leyland prime
- long prime
- Lucas prime
- lucky prime
- Markov prime
- Mersenne prime
- Mills prime
- minimal prime
- Motzkin prime
- Newman–Shanks–Williams prime
- non-generous prime
- odd prime
- Padovan prime
- palindromic prime
- palindromic wing prime
- partition prime
- Pell prime
- permutable prime
- Perrin prime
- Pierpont prime
- Pillai prime
- prime of Binary Quadratic Form
- prime subring
- prime triplet
- primeval prime
- primorial prime
- Proth prime
- Pythagorean prime
- Quartan prime
- Ramanujan prime
- regular prime
- repunit prime
- right-truncatable prime
- safe prime
- Schröder-Hipparchus prime
- Schröder prime
- self prime
- sexy prime
- Smarandache-Wellin prime
- Smarandache–Wellin prime
- Solinas prime
- Sophie Germain prime
- star prime
- Stern prime
- super-prime
- supersingular prime
- swinging prime
- Thabit prime
- titanic prime
- twin prime
- two-sided prime
- Ulam prime
- unique prime
- Wagstaff prime
- Wall-Sun-Sun prime
- Wall–Sun–Sun prime
- Weakly primes
- Wedderburn-Etherington prime
- Wieferich prime
- Wilson prime
- Wolstenholme prime
- Woodall prime
earliest stage
- Bulgarian: начало (bg) n (načalo)
- Chinese:
- Danish: begyndelse c
- Finnish: alku (fi), synty (fi)
- Italian: inizi (it) m pl, principio (it) m
- Japanese: 最初 (ja) (さいしょ, saisho), 初期 (ja) (しょき, shoki), 原始 (ja) (げんし, genshi)
- Old English: fruma m
- Portuguese: princípio (pt) m
- Russian: нача́ло (ru) n (načálo)
- Swedish: början (sv) c
most active, thriving, or successful stage or period
- Bulgarian: разцвет (bg) m (razcvet)
- Chinese:
- Danish: blomstringstid c
- Finnish: kukoistus (fi)
- German: Blütezeit (de) f, Blüte (de) f, Glanzzeit (de) f, Höhe des Schaffens f, Höhepunkt der Laufbahn m, die besten Jahre n pl
- Greek: ακμή (el) f (akmí)
- Ancient Greek: ἀκμή f (akmḗ)
- Hungarian: fénykor (hu)
- Italian: (professionally) all’apice, (physically) nel fiore degli anni
- Japanese: 最盛期 (ja) (さいせいき, saiseiki)
- Korean: 한창 (ko) (hanchang)
- Latin: flōs (la) m
- Maori: poutūmārōtanga, paerangi (figurative)
- Portuguese: auge (pt) m, ápice (pt) m
- Russian: расцве́т (ru) m (rascvét), зени́т (ru) m (zenít)
- Slovene: vrhunec m
- Spanish: mejor momento m, cresta de la ola f, zénit (es) m, culmen (es) m, fastigio m
- Swedish: storhetstid (sv) c, glansdagar c pl
fencing: first defensive position
algebra: prime element of a mathematical structure
- Bulgarian: просто число n (prosto čislo)
- Chinese:
- Czech: (when an integer) prvočíslo (cs) n
- Danish: (when an integer) primtal (da) n
- Dutch: (when an integer) priemgetal (nl) n
- Finnish: alkuluku (fi)
- French: nombre premier (fr) m
- Hungarian: prímszám (hu), prím (hu)
- Italian: numero primo (it)
- Japanese: 素 (ja) (そ, so)
- Portuguese: número primo, primo (pt) m
- Russian: просто́е число́ (ru) n (prostóje čisló)
- Swedish: (when an integer) primtal (sv) n
card game primer: four-card hand containing one card of each suit
symbol ( ′ )
- Finnish: yläpuolinen indeksointipilkku (name of character), pilkku (fi) (other uses)
- Hungarian: vessző (hu)
- Swedish: primtecken (sv)
- Turkish: üssü (tr)
chemistry: number expressing the combining weight or equivalent of any particular element
inch in the duodecimal system
Translations to be checked
- Chinese (character) (Old Chinese? Middle Chinese? Mandarin?): 卯 (in sense “early morning”)
Related to primage and Latin prīmus.
prime (third-person singular simple present primes, present participle priming, simple past and past participle primed)
- (transitive) To fill or prepare the chamber of a mechanism for its main work.
You'll have to press this button twice to prime the fuel pump.
- (transitive) To apply a coat of primer paint to.
I need to prime these handrails before we can apply the finish coat.
- (obsolete, intransitive) To be renewed.
1634, Francis Quarles, “My Soule Hath Desired Thee in the Night”, in Emblemes, London: G. M., published 1635, book III, page 129:
Nights baſhfull Empreſſe, though ſhe often wayne, / As oft repents her darkneſſe ; primes againe ; / And with her circling Hornes does re-embrace / Her brothers wealth, and orbs her ſilver face.
- (intransitive) To serve as priming for the charge of a gun.
- (intransitive, of a steam boiler) To work so that foaming occurs from too violent ebullition, which causes water to become mixed with, and be carried along with, the steam that is formed.
1959 April, P. Ransome-Wallis, “The Southern in Trouble on the Kent Coast”, in Trains Illustrated, London: Ian Allan Publishing, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 220:
Although we took our eight bogies along to Whitstable at 60 m.p.h., and made a clean start from there, after Herne Bay the engine primed badly on Blacksole Bank and nearly stopped before we got over the top. Then we ran like the wind across the marshes with half-regulator, 30 per cent cut-off, and the engine blowing off.
- To apply priming to (a musket or cannon); to apply a primer to (a metallic cartridge).
- To prepare; to make ready.
The boys are primed for mischief.
- (archaic) To instruct beforehand, as for an examination; to coach.
to prime a witness
- (UK, dialect, obsolete) To trim or prune.
to prime trees
- (mathematics) To mark with a prime mark.
to prepare a mechanism
- Bulgarian: пускам (bg) (puskam)
- Chinese:
- Danish: klargøre
- Finnish: valmistella (fi)
- French: amorcer (fr)
- German: vorbereiten (de), scharf machen (firearm), ansaugen lassen (pump), betriebsfertig machen, bereit machen
- Hungarian: előfeszít (hu), előhangol, előkészít (hu)
- Italian: (prepare) preparare (it); (bomb) innescare (it); (firearm) caricare (it); (pump) adescare (it)
- Japanese: (prepare) 準備する (ja) (じゅんびする, junbi suru), 用意する (ja) (よういする, yōi suru)
- Russian: гото́вить к рабо́те impf (gotóvitʹ k rabóte)
- Slovene: aktivirati
- Spanish: cebar (es)
- Swedish: aptera (sv), förbereda (sv), klarställa
to apply a coat of primer paint to
- Bulgarian: грундирам (grundiram)
- Chinese:
- Dutch: primen
- Finnish: pohjamaalata
- French: apprêter (fr)
- Galician: imprimar (gl)
- German: grundieren (de)
- Hungarian: alapoz (hu), alapozó réteget felvisz
- Italian: dare una vernice di fondo su
- Japanese: 下塗りする (したぬりする, shitanuri suru)
- Russian: грунтова́ть (ru) impf (gruntovátʹ)
- Spanish: imprimar (es), emprimar (es)
- Swedish: grunda (sv), grundmåla (sv)
to serve as priming for the charge of a gun
Translations to be checked
- Basque: (please verify) zenbaki (eu)
- Belarusian: (please verify) просты (be) (prósty)
- Ido: (please verify) unesma (io), (please verify) prima (io) (4)
- Indonesian: (please verify) prima (id)
- Korean: (please verify) 소 (ko) (so)
- Latin: (please verify) prīmus (la)
- Lithuanian: (please verify) pirmini
- Mandarin: (please verify) 素 (zh) (sù)
- Norwegian: (please verify) prim
- Sicilian: (please verify) primu (scn) m
- Slovak: (please verify) prvočís n
From French prime (“reward, prize, bonus”).
prime (plural primes)
- (cycling) An intermediate sprint within a race, usually offering a prize and/or points.
1997, Arnie Baker, Smart Cycling: Successful Training and Racing for Riders of All Levels:
Most primes are won with gaps on the field; most sprints are in bunches.
From proj (“to guard, defend”).[1]
prime f pl (definite plural primet)
- ^ Orel, Vladimir E. (1998) “prime”, in Albanian Etymological Dictionary, Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, →ISBN, page 345
From the feminine of Old French prim, prin, from Latin prīmus.
Noun from English premium.
prime (plural primes)
- (obsolete outside of set phrases) first
- Synonym: premier
- de prime abord ― at first glance
- prime jeunesse ― first flush of youth
prime f (plural primes)
- “prime”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
prime
prime
prīme
- “prime”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- prime in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
prime
- inflection of premir:
prime
prime (Cyrillic spelling приме)
prime
prime