| 1. | an elementary book for teaching children to read. |
| 2. | any book of elementary principles: a primer of phonetics. |
| 3. | great primer. |
| 4. | long primer. |
adjective, noun, verb, primed, prim⋅ing.| 1. | of the first importance; demanding the fullest consideration: a prime requisite. |
| 2. | of the greatest relevance or significance: a prime example. |
| 3. | of the highest eminence or rank: the prime authority on Chaucer. |
| 4. | of the greatest commercial value: prime building lots. |
| 5. | first-rate: This ale is prime! |
| 6. | (of meat, esp. of beef) noting or pertaining to the first grade or best quality: prime ribs of beef. |
| 7. | first in order of time, existence, or development; earliest; primitive. |
| 8. | basic; fundamental: the prime axioms of his philosophy. |
| 9. | Mathematics. (of any two or more numbers) having no common divisor except unity: The number 2 is prime to 9. |
| 10. | the most flourishing stage or state. |
| 11. | the time of early manhood or womanhood: the prime of youth. |
| 12. | the period or state of greatest perfection or vigor of human life: a man in his prime. |
| 13. | the choicest or best part of anything. |
| 14. | (esp. in the grading of U.S. beef) a grade, classification, or designation indicating the highest or most desirable quality. |
| 15. | the beginning or earliest stage of any period. |
| 16. | the spring of the year. |
| 17. | the first hour or period of the day, after sunrise. |
| 18. | Banking. prime rate. |
| 19. | Ecclesiastical. the second of the seven canonical hours or the service for it, originally fixed for the first hour of the day. |
| 20. | Mathematics.
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| 21. | Fencing. the first of eight defensive positions. |
| 22. | Music.
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| 23. | Linguistics. any basic, indivisible unit used in linguistic analysis. |
| 24. | Metallurgy. a piece of tin plate free from visible defects. |
| 25. | to prepare or make ready for a particular purpose or operation. |
| 26. | to supply (a firearm) with powder for communicating fire to a charge. |
| 27. | to lay a train of powder to (a charge, mine, etc.). |
| 28. | to pour or admit liquid into (a pump) to expel air and prepare for action. |
| 29. | to put fuel into (a carburetor) before starting an engine, in order to insure a sufficiently rich mixture at the start. |
| 30. | to cover (a surface) with a preparatory coat or color, as in painting. |
| 31. | to supply or equip with information, words, etc., for use: The politician was primed by his aides for the press conference. |
| 32. | to harvest the bottom leaves from (a tobacco plant). |
| 33. | (of a boiler) to deliver or discharge steam containing an excessive amount of water. |
| 34. | to harvest the bottom leaves from a tobacco plant. |
