PREFER


Meaning of PREFER in English

R prēˈfər, prə̇ˈ-, + vowel -fər.; - R -fə̄, + suffixal vowel -fər. also -fə̄r, + vowel in a following word -fər. or -fə̄ also -fə̄r transitive verb

( preferred ; preferred ; preferring ; prefers )

Etymology: Middle English preferren, from Middle French preferer, from Latin praeferre to bear before, put before, prefer, from prae- pre- + ferre to bear, carry — more at bear

1.

a. archaic : to promote or advance to a rank or position

has preferred me to the valuable rectory of this parish — Jane Austen

b. archaic : to move ahead or set forward

c. obsolete : to help bring about (a result)

2. : to have a preference for : choose : like better : value more highly

preferred to live abroad — Edward Shils

the rye grasses prefer cool and moist conditions — Farmer's Weekly (South Africa)

that peculiar taint of barbarism which makes men prefer occasional disobedience to systematic liberty — H.T.Buckle

preferred that excellence should thrive rather than be obscured by a many-voiced mediocrity

3. : to give (a creditor) priority : pay (a creditor) before or rather than another

4. archaic : to put or set forward or before someone : offer , present , recommend , introduce

5. : to bring or lay (as a charge, complaint, or indictment) against a person

preferred charges against him

6. : to bring forward or lay before one for consideration, decision, or action : propose

the young man seems to be preferring some request which the elder one is indisposed to grant — Ambrose Bierce

7. : to show preference for (one of two or more card suits bid by one's partner)

Synonyms: see offer

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.