/ɚˈli/ - [erlee] - Ear•ly
We found 23 definitions of early from 8 different sources.
Adjectiveearly, earlier, earliest |
||
early - at or near the beginning of a period of time or course of events or before the usual or expected time; "early morning"; "an early warning"; "early diagnosis"; "an early death"; "took early retirement"; "an early spring"; "early varieties of peas and tomatoes mature before most standard varieties" | ||
middle between an earlier and a later period of time; "in the middle years"; "in his middle thirties" | ||
late having died recently; "her late husband" | ||
first ranking above all others; "was first in her class"; "the foremost figure among marine artists"; "the top graduate" | ||
timing the regulation of occurrence, pace, or coordination to achieve a desired effect (as in music, theater, athletics, mechanics) | ||
primaeval, primeval, primordial, primal, aboriginal having existed from the beginning; in an earliest or original stage or state; "aboriginal forests"; "primal eras before the appearance of life on earth"; "the forest primeval"; "primordial matter"; "primordial forms of life" | ||
beforehand, advance situated ahead or going before; "an advance party"; "at that time the most advanced outpost was still east of the Rockies" | ||
archaean, archean of or relating to the earliest known rocks formed during the Precambrian Eon | ||
archaeozoic, archeozoic of or belonging to earlier of two divisions of the Precambrian era; "archeozoic life forms" | ||
azoic before the appearance of life; "azoic rocks contain not organic remains" | ||
earlier, earliest (comparative and superlative of `early') more early than; most early; "a fashion popular in earlier times"; "his earlier work reflects the influence of his teacher"; "Verdi's earliest and most raucous opera" | ||
earlyish being somewhat early; "at an earlyish hour" | ||
untimely, premature uncommonly early or before the expected time; "illness led to his premature death"; "alcohol brought him to an untimely end" | ||
premature, previous uncommonly early or before the expected time; "illness led to his premature death"; "alcohol brought him to an untimely end" | ||
proterozoic formed in the later of two divisions of the Precambrian era; "proterozoic life forms" | ||
proto indicating the first or earliest or original; "`proto' is a combining form in a word like `protolanguage' that refers to the hypothetical ancestor of another language or group of languages" | ||
early - being or occurring at an early stage of development; "in an early stage"; "early forms of life"; "early man"; "an early computer" | ||
later, late coming at a subsequent time or stage; "without ulterior argument"; "the mood posterior to" | ||
archaic, primitive little evolved from or characteristic of an earlier ancestral type; "archaic forms of life"; "primitive mammals"; "the okapi is a short-necked primitive cousin of the giraffe" | ||
young, new being in its early stage; "a young industry"; "the day is still young" | ||
primitive, rude, crude used of preliterate or tribal or nonindustrial societies; "primitive societies" | ||
embryotic, embryonic in an early stage of development; "the embryonic government staffed by survivors of the massacre"; "an embryonic nation, not yet self-governing" | ||
inchoate, incipient only partly in existence; imperfectly formed; "incipient civil disorder"; "an incipient tumor"; "a vague inchoate idea" | ||
early - of an early stage in the development of a language or literature; "the Early Hebrew alphabetical script is that used mainly from the 11th to the 6th centuries B.C."; "Early Modern English is represented in documents printed from 1476 to 1700" | ||
middle between an earlier and a later period of time; "in the middle years"; "in his middle thirties" | ||
late having died recently; "her late husband" | ||
linguistics the humanistic study of language and literature | ||
early - very young; "at an early age" | ||
early - belonging to the distant past; "the early inhabitants of Europe"; "former generations"; "in other times" | ||
former, other | ||
early - expected in the near future; "look for an early end to the negotiations" | ||
Adverb |
||
early - before the usual time or the time expected; "she graduated early"; "the house was completed ahead of time" | ||
ahead of time, too soon | ||
early - in good time; "he awoke betimes that morning" | ||
betimes | ||
early - during an early stage; "early on in her career" | ||
early on |