different between inaugural vs primal

inaugural

English

Etymology

From French inaugural, from inaugurer, from Latin augurare (to take omens).

Adjective

inaugural (not comparable)

  1. Of inauguration; as in a speech or lecture by the person being inaugurated.
    • 2008 August 21, Cape Times, p. 21:
      The University of Cape Town hosts an inaugural lecture by Professor Ian Scott [] on Wednesday at 8pm.
  2. Marking the beginning of an operation, venture, etc.
    2009 was the inaugural season for New York Yankees' new stadium.

Translations

Noun

inaugural (plural inaugurals)

  1. An inauguration; a formal beginning.
    The inaugural of the President will take place in March.
  2. A formal speech given at the beginning of an office.
    • 2009, Teddy Davis, ABC News on March 13, 2009.
      In his inaugural, President Obama proclaimed 'an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas, that for far too long have strangled our politics'.

Translations


Portuguese

Pronunciation

Adjective

inaugural m or f (plural inaugurais, comparable)

  1. being a first occurrence or event
  2. occurring during an inauguration

Romanian

Etymology

From French inaugural

Adjective

inaugural m or n (feminine singular inaugural?, masculine plural inaugurali, feminine and neuter plural inaugurale)

  1. inaugural

Declension


Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /inau?u??al/, [i.nau?.??u??al]

Adjective

inaugural (plural inaugurales)

  1. inaugural

Derived terms

inaugural From the web:

  • what inaugural address
  • what inaugural means
  • what inaugural events are happening tonight
  • what inaugural events are tonight
  • what inaugural events are happening today
  • what inaugural address means
  • what inaugural lecture means
  • what's inaugural lecture


primal

English

Etymology

From Medieval Latin primalis, from Latin primus (first).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?p?a?m?l/
  • Rhymes: -a?m?l

Adjective

primal (not comparable)

  1. Being the first in time or in history.
  2. Of greatest importance; primary.
  3. (meat trade) Being one of the pieces of meat initially separated from the carcass during butchering, prior to division into smaller cuts.

Synonyms

  • (first in time or history): aboriginal, primaeval/primeval, primordial
  • (of greatest importance): primary

Derived terms

  • primal therapist
  • primal therapy
  • primality
  • primally

Translations

Noun

primal (plural primals)

  1. A primal cut (of meat).

Verb

primal (third-person singular simple present primals, present participle primaling or primalling, simple past and past participle primaled or primalled)

  1. (intransitive) To take part in primal therapy.
    • 1979, The Journal of Orgonomy (volume 13, issue 1, page 108)
      One of my patients told me of an acquaintance who primaled in the shopping center. Janov described a patient who primaled on the tennis court. Apparently, once initiated, patients primal in any place at any time for the rest of their lives.
    • 1982, Lawrence Edwin Abt, Irving R. Stuart, The Newer Therapies: A Sourcebook (page 369)
      Primaling on the infant level seems so genuinely babyish that the unsophisticated observer may mistake it for psychotic behavior.

References

  • Primal cut on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • imparl

primal From the web:

  • what primal source are you
  • what primal did ilberd summon
  • what primal means
  • what primal kitchen products are whole30
  • what primal's stem from the beef round
  • what primal source am i
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