| 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. | Anthropology. of or pertaining to a preliterate or tribal people having cultural or physical similarities with their early ancestors: no longer in technical use. |
| 5. | unaffected or little affected by civilizing influences; uncivilized; savage: primitive passions. |
| 6. | being in its earliest period; early: the primitive phase of the history of a town. |
| 7. | old-fashioned: primitive ideas and habits. |
| 8. | simple; unsophisticated: a primitive farm implement. |
| 9. | crude; unrefined: primitive living conditions. |
| 10. | Linguistics.
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| 11. | primary, as distinguished from secondary. |
| 12. | Biology.
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| 13. | someone or something primitive. |
| 14. | Fine Arts.
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| 15. | Mathematics.
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| 16. | Linguistics. the form from which a given word or other linguistic form has been derived, by either morphological or historical processes, as take in undertake. |
prim·i·tive (prĭm'ĭ-tĭv) adj.
[Middle English, from Old French primitif, primitive, from Latin prīmitīvus, from prīmitus, at first, from prīmus, first; see per1 in Indo-European roots.] prim'i·tive·ly adv., prim'i·tive·ness, prim'i·tiv'i·ty n. |
primitive prim·i·tive (prĭm'ĭ-tĭv)
adj.
Primary; basic.
Of or being an earliest or original stage.
Being little evolved from an early ancestral type.
primitive (prĭm'ĭ-tĭv) Pronunciation Key
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primitive programming
A function, operator, or type which is built into a programming language (or operating system), either for speed of execution or because it would be impossible to write it in the language. Primitives typically include the arithmetic and logical operations (plus, minus, and, or, etc.) and are implemented by a small number of machine language instructions.
(1995-05-01)