Dictionary entry

Before

Webster's Dictionary 1913

Be‐fore″ (�), prep. [OE. beforen, biforen, before, AS. beforan; pref. be- + foran, fore, before. See Be-, and Fore.] 1. In front of; preceding in space; ahead of; as, to stand before the fire; before the house.

His angel, who shall go

Before them in a cloud and pillar of fire.

Milton.

2. Preceding in time; earlier than; previously to; anterior to the time when; — sometimes with the additional idea of purpose; in order that.

Before Abraham was, I am.

John viii. 58.

Before this treatise can become of use, two points are necessary.

Swift.

☞ Formerly before, in this sense, was followed by that. “Before that Philip called thee... I saw thee.” John i. 48.

3. An advance of; farther onward, in place or time.

The golden age... is before us.

Carlyle.

4. Prior or preceding in dignity, order, rank, right, or worth; rather than.

He that cometh after me is preferred before me.

John i. 15.

The eldest son is before the younger in succession.

Johnson.

5. In presence or sight of; face to face with; facing.

Abraham bowed down himself before the people.

Gen. xxiii. 12.

Wherewith shall I come before the Lord?

Micah vi. 6.

6. Under the cognizance or jurisdiction of.

If a suit be begun before an archdeacon.

Ayliffe.

7. Open for; free of access to; in the power of.

The world was all before them where to choose.

Milton.

Before the mast(Naut.), as a common sailor, — because the sailors live in the forecastle, forward of the foremast. — Before the wind(Naut.), in the direction of the wind and by its impulse; having the wind aft.