ante litteram
English
Etymology
From Latin ante (“before”) + litteram, accusative singular of littera (“letter, writing”).
Prepositional phrase
- Before the term existed; before the term was coined.
- In the fifteenth century, he espoused ecology ante litteram. He endorsed ecology before the term "ecology" existed.
- 2007, Patricia Vilches, Gerald E. Seaman, Seeking Real Truths: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Machiavelli, page 191:
- What could have been a moral victory or arguably a feminist struggle ante litteram remains a farcical squabble between a nagging wife and a ridiculous old man.
- 2011, Davide Rodogno, Against Massacre: Humanitarian Interventions in the Ottoman Empire, 1815-1914, page 16:
- the new mass media played an increasingly crucial role throughout the nineteenth century as an ante litteram CNN.
Usage notes
Usually used postpositively, after a term applied anachronistically.
Synonyms
Italian
Adverb
ante litteram
- ante litteram
- Synonym: avantilettera
- 1994, Massimo Baldini, La storia delle utopie, page 92:
- È una utopia «non solo sociale, ma scientifica e cosmica. Réstif è evoluzionista e lamarckiano ante litteram, ma con accenti fantastici»
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 2013, Massimo Pazienti, Le guide di Roma tra medioevo e novecento: Dai mirabilia urbis ai baedeker, page 49:
- Simbolo di questo nuovo approccio, non più immaginifico ma archeologico ante litteram, ai resti classici è proprio l'aggirarsi di Poggio Bracciolini tra le rovine dei monumenti, abbandonati tra le erbacce ed esposti alle spoliazioni, per “interrogarli”.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 2005, Mark Twain (from the Introduction by translator Giuseppe Culicchia), Le avventure di Huckleberry Finn, page 3:
- E mettendo il racconto in bocca a un teppista ante litteram come Huck Finn, che a scoula ci va raramente e in ogni caso mai volentieri, opera un scempio (scientifico) della grammatica e della sintassi.
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Usage notes
- Used postpositively, after a term applied anachronistically.
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