primogenitive

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English

Adjective

primogenitive (comparative more primogenitive, superlative most primogenitive)

  1. Firstborn.
    • 2014, Roland Mushat Frye, The Renaissance Hamlet, page 68:
      This left Henry de Bourbon, the Huguenot King of Navarre, as the primogenitive heir to the French throne, an eventuality the Catholic League in France was unwilling to accept.
    • 2017, Simon Pearse Brodbeck, The Mahabharata Patriline:
      The primogenitive male line is said here to carry with it possession of the state—the patrimony of the primogenitive male ancestors.
  2. Based on or pertaining to primogeniture.
    • 1834 May, C.C.P., “The Evils of Primogenitive Inheritance”, in The Monthly Repository, volume 8, page 349:
      The system of primogenitive inheritance utterly destroys this salutary principle ; and for the following reasons:
    • 1985, Albion - Volume 17, page 394:
      If a society must be absolutely primogenitive before the word patrilineal is applied to it, then no society has ever been patrilineal.

Noun

primogenitive (uncountable)

  1. (obsolete) primogeniture