prior to

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English[edit]

Preposition[edit]

prior to

  1. (formal) before, previous to.

Usage notes[edit]

The etymological antonym of prior is ulterior (from Latin), and the corresponding antonym to prior to is ulterior to (compare primate/ultimate for “first/last”). This is now no longer used, however, and there is no corresponding antonym to express “after”. Typically either subsequent (to) or posterior (to) are used, but these form different pairs – precedent/subsequent and anterior/posterior – and are more formal than prior. For this reason some suggest against using prior to, particularly when it is paired with an antonym, instead using the Germanic before/after.[1][2]

Translations[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Antonym of prior to?”, Danny Beckett, English Language & Usage, StackExchange
  2. ^ Garner, Modern American Usage:
    “As Theodore Bernstein once pointed out, one should feel free to use prior to instead of before only if one is accustomed to using posterior to for after.

Anagrams[edit]