in or during the first part of a period of time, a course of action, a series of events, etc.:
early in the year.
2.
in the early part of the morning:
to get up early.
3.
before the usual or appointed time; ahead of time:
They came early and found their hosts still dressing.
4.
far back in time:
The Greeks early learned to sail and navigate.
adjective, earlier, earliest.
5.
occurring in the first part of a period of time, a course of action, a series of events, etc.:
an early hour of the day.
6.
occurring before the usual or appointed time:
an early dinner.
7.
belonging to a period far back in time:
early French architecture.
8.
occurring in the near future:
I look forward to an early reply.
9.
(of a fruit or vegetable) appearing or maturing before most others of its type:
early apples.
noun, plural earlies.
10.
a fruit or vegetable that appears before most others of its type.
Idioms
11.
early on, with but little time elapsed; early in the course of a process, project, etc.; early in the game.
Origin
before 950;Middle Englisherlich (adj.), erliche (adv.), Old Englishǣrlīc, ǣrlīce, mutated variant of ārlīc, ārlīce, equivalent to ār- early (positive of ǣrere) + līc(e) -ly
Related forms
earliness, noun
Synonyms
5. initial. 6. beforehand, premature.
Early
[ur-lee] /ˈɜr li/
noun
1.
Jubal Anderson
[joo-buh l] /ˈdʒu bəl/ (Show IPA), 1816–94, Confederate general in the U.S. Civil War.
Examples from the web for early
During the early days of diesel locomotive use, they were also painted black.
early versions of fortran provided by other vendors suffered from the same disadvantage.
From an early age, alisa displayed an interest in literature and film.
The storyline was exactly the same as in the early original version.
early returns on election night seemed to indicate that schulz would win.
Crime themes dominated the roster at monogram in the late thirties and early forties.
Egg production peaks in the early spring, when farm expenses are high and income is low.
This early recipe produced a relatively mild and cakey brownie.
From an early age, the parents introduced their children to sport.
early history aboriginal people have lived throughout the area for thousands of years.
British Dictionary definitions for early
early
/ˈɜːlɪ/
adjective -lier, -liest
1.
before the expected or usual time
2.
occurring in or characteristic of the first part of a period or sequence
3.
occurring in or characteristic of a period far back in time
4.
occurring in the near future
5.
at the earliest, not before the time or date mentioned
6.
early days, too soon to tell how things will turn out
adverb -lier
7.
before the expected or usual time
8.
near the first part of a period or sequence: I was talking to him earlier
Derived Forms
earliness, noun
Word Origin
Old English ǣrlīce, from ǣrere + -līce-ly²; related to Old Norse arliga
Word Origin and History for early
adv.
Old English ærlic "early," from ær "soon, ere" (see ere) + -lice, adverbial suffix (see -ly (2)). Cf. Old Norse arliga "early." The early bird of the proverb is from 1670s. Related: Earlier; earliest.