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primeval

adjective

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L339520 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /pɹaɪ̯ˈmiː.vəl/ / /pɹʌɪ̯-/ / /pɹaɪ̯ˈmi.vəl/

adj

Etymology: From Latin primaevus (“in the first or earliest period of life”) + -al, from primus (“first”) + aevum (“time, age”); see prime and age.

  1. Belonging to the first ages.

    a primeval galaxy

    And Tarzan had to be contented with that arrangement, though he would have liked it well enough to have set off the next morning—he was as impatient as a child. Really Tarzan of the Apes was but a child, or a primeval man, which is the same thing in a way.

  2. Primary; original.

    A letter from Mr. [Brian Houghton] Hodgson to Mr. Bayley, was then read, giving an outline of the theocracy of the Buddha system of Nepal. […] According to the information now communicated, the northern Buddhas acknowledge four sets of divine beings, or of superhuman objects of veneration. The first of these is, contrary to the generally supposed atheistical tendency of the faith, one primæval and uncreated deity. This first Buddha manifested five of his attributes, as five secondary Buddhas; in one of whom, Amitabha, or the 'immeasurably splendid,' in Prakrit and Pali, Amitabo, we recognise the Amito of the Japanese.

    But if life has a happiness over which the primeval curse has passed and harmed not, it is the early and long enduring affection of blood and habit.

  3. Primitive.

    If their views were entrancing their sanitation was primeval; if they possessed stables they were also next to the gas-works; if their gardens were delightful there were odours suspicious of mice in the bedrooms.