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Word Meanings - FORMERLY - Book Publishers vocabulary database

In time past, either in time immediately preceding or at any indefinite distance; of old; heretofore.

Related words: (words related to FORMERLY)

  • PRECEDENTLY
    Beforehand; antecedently.
  • DISTANCE
    A space marked out in the last part of a race course. The horse that ran the whole field out of distance. L'Estrange. Note: In trotting matches under the rules of the American Association, the distance varies with the conditions of the race, being
  • PRECEDENTED
    Having a precedent; authorized or sanctioned by an example of a like kind. Walpole.
  • PRECEDE
    1. To go before in order of time; to occur first with relation to anything. "Harm precedes not sin." Milton. 2. To go before in place, rank, or importance. 3. To cause to be preceded; to preface; to introduce; -- used with by or with before the
  • PRECEDENCE; PRECEDENCY
    1. The act or state of preceding or going before in order of time; priority; as, one event has precedence of another. 2. The act or state of going or being before in rank or dignity, or the place of honor; right to a more honorable place; superior
  • INDEFINITE
    Too numerous or variable to make a particular enumeration important; -- said of the parts of a flower, and the like. Also, indeterminate. Indefinite article , the word a or an, used with nouns to denote any one of a common or general class. --
  • HERETOFORE
    Up to this time; hitherto; before; in time past. Shak.
  • IMMEDIATELY
    1. In an immediate manner; without intervention of any other person or thing; proximately; directly; -- opposed to mediately; as, immediately contiguous. God's acceptance of it either immediately by himself, or mediately by the hands of the bishop.
  • INDEFINITENESS
    The quality of being indefinite.
  • PRECEDENTIAL
    Of the nature of a precedent; having force as an example for imitation; as, precedential transactions. All their actions in that time are not precedential to warrant posterity. Fuller.
  • INDEFINITELY
    In an indefinite manner or degree; without any settled limitation; vaguely; not with certainty or exactness; as, to use a word indefinitely. If the world be indefinitely extended, that is, so far as no human intellect can fancy any bound of it. Ray.
  • PRECEDING
    In the direction toward which stars appear to move. See Following, 2. (more info) 1. Going before; -- opposed to following.
  • PRECEDENT
    Going before; anterior; preceding; antecedent; as, precedent services. Shak. "A precedent injury." Bacon. Condition precedent , a condition which precede the vesting of an estate, or the accruing of a right.
  • PRECEDANEOUS
    Preceding; antecedent; previous. Hammond.
  • EITHER
    MHG. iegeweder); a + ge + hwæ whether. See Each, and Whether, and cf. 1. One of two; the one or the other; -- properly used of two things, but sometimes of a larger number, for any one. Lepidus flatters both, Of both is flattered; but he neither
  • EQUIDISTANCE
    Equal distance.
  • NEITHER
    Not either; not the one or the other. Which of them shall I take Both one or neither Neither can be enjoyed, If both remain alive. Shak. He neither loves, Nor either cares for him. Shak. (more info) nahwæ; na never, not + hwæ whether. The word
  • UNPRECEDENTED
    Having no precedent or example; not preceded by a like case; not having the authority of prior example; novel; new; unexampled. -- Un*prec"e*dent*ed*ly, adv.
  • THERETOFORE
    Up to that time; before then; -- correlative with heretofore.

 

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