prior
Meanings
Plural: priors
Noun
- the head of a religious order; in an abbey the prior is next below the abbot
- 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.
- 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.
- In the rationalsphere: a belief supported by previous evidence or experience that one can use to make inferences about the future.
- A previous arrest or criminal conviction on someone's criminal record.
- A high-ranking member of a religious house or religious order.
- In an abbey, the person ranking just after the abbot, appointed as his deputy; a prior claustral.
- A high-ranking member of a religious house or religious order.
- 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.
- A high-ranking member of a religious house or religious order.
- The head friar of a house of friars.
- A high-ranking member of a religious house or religious order.
- The head of the Arrouaisian, Augustinian, and formerly Premonstratensian religious orders.
- A high-ranking member of a religious house or religious order.
- An honorary position held by a priest in some cathedrals.
- A chief magistrate of the Republic of Florence (1115–1569) in what is now Italy.
- The elected head of a guild of craftsmen or merchants in some countries in Europe and South America.
- A person who is the earliest or most prominent in a field; the chief.
- The head of a company.
Adjective Satellite
- earlier in time
Adj
- Coming before in order or time; earlier, former, previous.
- More important or significant.
- 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.
Adv
- Chiefly followed by to: in advance, before, previously.
Origin / Etymology
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.
The adverb and noun are derived from the adjective.
Synonyms
advance, ago, antecedent, anterior, dean, earlier, erstwhile, ex, foregone, former, hitherto, old, olden, past, precedent, preceding, previous, prior, provost, quondam, sometime, used-to-be, whilom
Antonyms
Scrabble Score: 7
prior is a valid Scrabble (US) TWL wordprior is a valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
prior is a valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary