first

  • 71first up — informal first of all. → first …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 72first — I. a. 1. Foremost, leading. 2. Chief, highest, principal, capital. 3. Earliest. 4. Primary, elementary, rudimentary. 5. Primitive, primeval, pristine. II. ad. In the first place, at the outset, in the beginning, first and foremost, before… …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 73first — [OE] As its st ending suggests, first was originally a superlative form. Its distant ancestor was Indo European *pro, denoting ‘before, in front’ (amongst whose other descendants to have reached English are prime and the prefix proto ). Its… …

    Word origins

  • 74first — See first, firstly, secondly …

    Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • 75FIRST — ● ►en sg. m. ►SECU Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams. Organisme de coordination des CERT et autres équipes de réaction aux incidents , créé en 1990. http://www.first.org …

    Dictionnaire d'informatique francophone

  • 76first up — The first run a horse has in a new campaign or preparation …

    Equestrian sports dictionary

  • 77FIRST — Fully Integrated Road Safety Technology (Anglais. En franc. = Technologie pleinement intégrée de sécurité routière). Concept global regroupant tous les facteurs de sécurité (active, passive, aux tiers). Chez BMW. Noter qu en anglais, first… …

    Sigles et Acronymes francais

  • 78First — kraigas statusas Aprobuotas sritis statyba apibrėžtis Šlaitinio stogo viršutinė horizontali šlaitų sankirtos briauna. atitikmenys: angl. ridge vok. First, m rus. конёк šaltinis Statybos techninis reglamentas STR 2.05.02:2008 „Statinių… …

    Lithuanian dictionary (lietuvių žodynas)

  • 79first — /fɜ:st/ noun a person or thing that is there at the beginning or earlier than others ● Our company was one of the first to sell into the European market …

    Dictionary of banking and finance

  • 80First — Der First wird von den Vögeln mehr beschmuzt als die Wände. – Parömiakon, 1105. Schattenseite des Hochstehens …

    Deutsches Sprichwörter-Lexikon