Original


[uh-rij-uh-nl] /əˈrɪdʒ ə nl/

adjective
1.
belonging or pertaining to the or beginning of something, or to a thing at its beginning:
The book still has its original binding.
2.
new; fresh; inventive; novel:
an original way of advertising.
3.
arising or proceeding independently of anything else:
an original view of history.
4.
capable of or given to thinking or acting in an independent, creative, or individual manner:
an original thinker.
5.
created, undertaken, or presented for the first time:
to give the original performance of a string quartet.
6.
being something from which a copy, a translation, or the like is made:
The original document is in Washington.
noun
7.
a primary form or type from which varieties are derived.
8.
an original work, writing, or the like, as opposed to any copy or imitation:
The original of this is in the British Museum.
9.
the person or thing represented by a picture, description, etc.:
The original is said to have been the painter’s own house.
10.
a person whose ways of thinking or acting are original:
In a field of brilliant technicians he is a true original.
11.
Archaic. an eccentric person.
12.
Archaic. a source of being; an author or .
/əˈrɪdʒɪnəl/
adjective
1.
of or relating to an origin or beginning
2.
fresh and unusual; novel
3.
able to think of or carry out new ideas or concepts
4.
being that from which a copy, translation, etc, is made
noun
5.
the first and genuine form of something, from which others are derived
6.
a person or thing used as a model in art or literature
7.
a person whose way of thinking is unusual or creative
8.
an unconventional or strange person
9.
the first form or occurrence of something
10.
an archaic word for originator See originator
adj.

early 14c., “first in time, earliest,” from Old French original “first” (13c.) and directly from Latin originalis, from originem (nominative origo) “beginning, source, birth,” from oriri “to rise” (see orchestra). The first reference is in original sin “innate depravity of man’s nature,” supposed to be inherited from Adam in consequence of the Fall. Related: Originally.
n.

“original text,” late 14c., from Medieval Latin originale (see original (adj.)). Of photographs, films, sound recordings, etc., from 1918.

Read Also:

  • Origin

    [awr-i-jin, or-] /ˈɔr ɪ dʒɪn, ˈɒr-/ noun 1. something from which anything arises or is derived; source; fountainhead: to follow a stream to its origin. 2. rise or derivation from a particular source: the origin of a word. 3. the first stage of existence; beginning: the origin of Quakerism in America. 4. ancestry; parentage; extraction: […]

  • Origen

    [awr-i-jen, -juh n, or-] /ˈɔr ɪˌdʒɛn, -dʒən, ˈɒr-/ noun 1. (Origenes Admantius) a.d. 185?–254? Alexandrian writer, Christian theologian, and teacher. /ˈɒrɪˌdʒɛn/ noun 1. ?185–?254 ad, Christian theologian, born in Alexandria. His writings include Hexapla, a synopsis of the Old Testament, Contra Celsum, a defence of Christianity, and De principiis, a statement of Christian theology

  • Orodigitofacial

    orodigitofacial o·ro·dig·i·to·fa·cial (ôr’ō-dĭj’ĭ-tō-fā’shəl) adj. Relating to the mouth, fingers, and face.

  • Orodigitofacial dysostosis

    orodigitofacial dysostosis n. An inherited syndrome that is lethal in males and is characterized by various defects of the oral cavity, face, and hands. Also called orofaciodigital syndrome.

  • Orofacial

    orofacial o·ro·fa·cial (ôr’ō-fā’shəl) adj. Relating to the mouth and face.


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