private
/ˈpɹaɪ.vɪt/ · adj
Meaning
- Belonging or pertaining to an individual person, group of people, or entity that is not the state.
- Relating to an individual or group of individuals outside of their official roles; often, sensitive or personal.
- Not publicly known or divulged; secret, confidential; (of a message) intended only for a specific person or group.
- Protected from view or disturbance by others; secluded; not publicly accessible.
- Not in governmental office or employment.
- Secretive; reserved.
- Not traded by the public.
- Of a room in a medical facility, not shared with another patient.
- Financially reliant on fees rather than government funding.
- Accessible only to the class itself or instances of it, and not to other classes or even subclasses.
- Of the mind or language, not in principle experienceable, knowable, or understandable by others.
- A soldier of the lowest rank in the army.
- A doctor working in privately rather than publicly funded health care.
- The genitals.
- A secret message; a personal unofficial communication.
- Personal interest; particular business.
- Privacy; retirement.
- One not invested with a public office.
- A private lesson.
- To make something hidden from the public (without deleting it permanently).
- Alternative letter-case form of private.
Etymology / origin
From Middle English privat(e) (“individual, exclusive, private”), from Latin prīvātus (“bereaved, deprived, set apart from, release”), perfect passive participle of prīvō (“to bereave, deprive, release”) (see -ate (adjective-forming suffix) for more), from prīvus (“private, one's own, proper”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *per; compare prime, prior, pristine. Doublet of privy.
- *per(ine-pro)→
- prīvātus(la)→
- privat(enm)→
- private (English)
- Relations: inh, der, der
Related words
Descendant words
- privaatti(Finnish) (cog)
- プライベート(Japanese) (bor)
- missa privata(Latin) (cog)
- ਪ੍ਰਾਈਵੇਟ(Punjabi) (bor)
- praivet(Tok Pisin) (der)
- preifat(Welsh) (bor)
Sources
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