Datasegment.com Online Dictionary
  Online Dictionary : E : early english

early english


1 definition found

early english - Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 :

  Early \Ear"ly\, a. [Compar. Earlier ([~e]r"l[i^]*[~e]r);
     superl. Earliest.] [OE. earlich. [root]204. See Early,
     adv.]
     1. In advance of the usual or appointed time; in good season;
        prior in time; among or near the first; -- opposed to
        late; as, the early bird; an early spring; early fruit.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Early and provident fear is the mother of safety.
                                                    --Burke.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The doorsteps and threshold with the early grass
              springing up about them.              --Hawthorne.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. Coming in the first part of a period of time, or among the
        first of successive acts, events, etc.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Seen in life's early morning sky.     --Keble.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The forms of its earlier manhood.     --Longfellow.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The earliest poem he composed was in his seventeenth
              summer.                               --J. C.
                                                    Shairp.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     Early English (Philol.) See the Note under English.
  
     Early English architecture, the first of the pointed or
        Gothic styles used in England, succeeding the Norman style
        in the 12th and 13th centuries.
  
     Syn: Forward; timely; not late; seasonable.
          [1913 Webster]