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Oxford 5000 vocabulary |B1|ACADEMIC vocabularySPEAKING vocabularyWRITING vocabulary pre‧vi‧ous /ˈpriːviəs/ adjective [only before noun]
قبلی، سابق
پیشین، اسبق، جلوتر، مقدم
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Advanced Persian Dictionary کامپیوتر: عقب
[TahlilGaran] Persian Dictionary ▲
Synonyms & Related Words previous[adjective]Synonyms: earlier, erstwhile, foregoing, former, past, preceding, prior
Antonyms: subsequent, consequent
English Thesaurus: last, previous, former, old, final, ... [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary pre‧vi‧ous S1 W1 AC /ˈpriːviəs/
adjective [
Word Family: adverb:
previously;
adjective:
previous]
[
Date: 1600-1700;
Language: Latin;
Origin: praevius 'leading the way', from via 'way']
1. [only before noun] having happened or existed before the event, time, or thing that you are talking about now:
I’ve met him before on two previous occasions. She has two children from a previous marriage. Do you have any previous experience of this type of work? The lawyer told the judge that Kennedy had no previous convictions.2. the previous day/chapter/owner etc the one that came immediately before the one you are talking about now:
I had met them the previous day. as we said in the previous chapter The trees had been planted by the previous owner.3. previous to something formal before a particular time or event:
There were almost no women MPs previous to 1945. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Thesaurus last most recent or nearest to the present time:
His last film was much better. It rained all day last Saturday. The last time I saw her was two years ago.previous before this one, or before the one that you are talking about:
See the diagram in the previous chapter. His previous records had all been jazz records. How much were you earning in your previous job?former [only before noun] formal existing or having a particular position in the past, but not now:
the former Soviet Union the former US president Interest rates are unlikely to return to their former level. the former Chief Executiveold [only before noun] used about a person or thing that existed in the past, but has been replaced by a newer one:
an old boyfriend The old model was much slower.final [only before noun] last in a series of actions, events, parts of a story etc:
It’s the final game of the championship tomorrow. the final scene of the filmclosing [only before noun] used about the last part of a long period of time, or of an event, book etc that has been exciting or interesting:
the closing years of the twentieth century Barnes scored the winning goal in the closing minutes of the game.concluding [only before noun] used about the last part of a piece of writing, a speech, or an organized event, that ends it in a definite way:
the concluding section of the report the judge’s concluding remarkspenultimate /peˈnʌltəmət, peˈnʌltɪmət, pə-/
[only before noun] the one before the last one:
the penultimate chaptercontinue to happen without stopping:
The good weather seems likely to continue. Unless there are serious negotiations, the fighting will continue. Some people have lost work, and this will continue to happen until the computer system is fixed. The review process is expected to continue for several weeks.go on to continue, especially for a long time:
Disputes between neighbours can go on for years.carry on British English to continue, especially when there are problems:
The game carried on despite the injury of two players.drag on to continue for much longer than necessary or for longer than you want:
The meeting dragged on for another hour. The talks dragged on, with no apparent hope of achieving a peaceful solution.persist formal if something bad persists, it continues to exist or happen:
See your doctor if the symptoms persist. If adverse weather conditions persist, the game will be cancelled. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲