prim·i·tive
(prĭm′ĭ-tĭv)adj.1. a. Of or relating to an early or original stage or state; primeval: life in the primitive ocean.
b. Occurring in or characteristic of an early stage of development or evolution: fossils of primitive angiosperms from the Cretaceous Period.
c. Having developed early in the evolutionary history of a group: Hair is a primitive trait of mammals.
d. Regarded as having changed little in evolutionary history. Not in scientific use: The coelacanth is a primitive fish.
2. Characterized by simplicity or crudity; unsophisticated: primitive weapons.
3. Of or relating to a nonindustrial, often tribal culture, especially one that is characterized by an absence of literacy and a low level of economic or technological complexity: primitive societies.
4. Not derived from something else; primary or basic: "Conscious perception is ... the most primitive form of judgment" (Alfred North Whitehead).
5. Linguistics a. Serving as the basis for derived or inflected forms: Pick is the primitive word from which picket is derived.
b. Being a protolanguage: primitive Germanic.
6. Not resulting from conscious thought or deliberation; unconscious or instinctual: primitive passions.
7. a. Of or created by an artist without formal training; simple or naive in style.
b. Of or relating to late medieval or pre-Renaissance European painters or sculptors.
n.1. A person belonging to a nonindustrial, often tribal society, especially a society characterized by a low level of economic or technological complexity.
2. Derogatory An unsophisticated or unintelligent person.
3. One that is at a low or early stage of development.
4. a. One belonging to an early stage in the development of an artistic trend, especially a painter of the pre-Renaissance period.
b. An artist having or affecting a simple, direct, unschooled style, as of painting.
c. A work of art created by a primitive artist.
5. Linguistics a. A word or word element from which another word is derived by morphological or historical processes or from which inflected forms are derived.
b. A basic and indivisible unit of linguistic analysis. Also called prime.
6. Mathematics An algebraic or geometric expression from which another expression is derived.
7. Computers A basic or fundamental unit of machine instruction or translation.
[Middle English, from Old French
primitif, primitive, from Latin
prīmitīvus, from
prīmitus,
at first, from
prīmus,
first; see
per in
Indo-European roots.]
prim′i·tive·ly adv.
prim′i·tive·ness, prim′i·tiv′i·ty n.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
primitive
(ˈprɪmɪtɪv) adj1. of or belonging to the first or beginning; original
2. characteristic of an early state, esp in being crude or uncivilized: a primitive dwelling.
3. (Anthropology & Ethnology) anthropol denoting or relating to a preliterate and nonindustrial social system
4. (Biology)
biology a. of, relating to, or resembling an early stage in the evolutionary development of a particular group of organisms: primitive amphibians.
5. (Art Terms) showing the characteristics of primitive painters; untrained, childlike, or naive
6. (Geological Science) geology pertaining to magmas that have experienced only small degrees of fractional crystallization or crystal contamination
7. (Geological Science) obsolete of, relating to, or denoting rocks formed in or before the Palaeozoic era
8. (Linguistics) obsolete denoting a word from which another word is derived, as for example hope, from which hopeless is derived
9. (Theology) Protestant theol of, relating to, or associated with a minority group that breaks away from a sect, denomination, or Church in order to return to what is regarded as the original simplicity of the Gospels
n10. a primitive person or thing
11. (Art Terms)
a. an artist whose work does not conform to traditional, academic, or avant-garde standards of Western painting, such as a painter from an African or Oceanic civilization
b. a painter of the pre-Renaissance era in European painting
c. a painter of any era whose work appears childlike or untrained. Also called (for senses 11a, 11c): naive
12. (Art Terms) a work by such an artist
13. (Linguistics) a word or concept from which another word or concept is derived
14. (Mathematics) maths a curve, function, or other form from which another is derived
[C14: from Latin prīmitīvus earliest of its kind, primitive, from prīmus first]
ˈprimitively adv
ˈprimitiveness n
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
prim•i•tive
(ˈprɪm ɪ tɪv)
adj. 1. being the first or earliest of the kind or in existence, esp. in an early age of the world: primitive forms of life.
2. early in the history of the world or of humankind.
3. characteristic of early ages or of an early state of human development: primitive toolmaking.
4. Anthropol. a. of or indicating a people or society organized in bands or tribes and having a simple economy and technology.
b. (no longer in technical use) of or indicating a preliterate people having cultural or physical similarities with their early ancestors.
5. unaffected or little affected by civilizing influences; uncivilized; savage: primitive passions.
6. of an early or the earliest period.
7. old-fashioned: primitive notions of style.
8. simple or crude: primitive equipment; primitive housing.
9. a. of or pertaining to a form from which a word or other linguistic form is derived; not derivative.
b. of or pertaining to a protolanguage.
10. primary, as distinguished from secondary.
11. Biol. a. rudimentary; primordial.
b. noting species, varieties, etc., only slightly evolved from early antecedent types.
c. of early formation and temporary, as a part that subsequently disappears.
n. 12. someone or something primitive.
13. a. an artist of a preliterate culture.
b. a naive or unschooled artist.
c. an artist belonging to the early stage in the development of a style.
d. a work of art by a primitive artist.
14. a geometric or algebraic form or expression from which another is derived.
15. a form from which a given word or other linguistic form has been derived by morphological or historical processes, as take in undertake.
[1350–1400; Middle English (< Middle French) < Latin prīmitīvus the first to form, early, derivative of prīmit(iae) first fruits, derivative of prīmus first]
prim′i•tive•ly, adv.
prim′i•tive•ness, prim`i•tiv′i•ty, n.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.