be|fore
◆◆◆ /b
I
fɔː
r
/
In addition to the uses shown below,
before
is used in the phrasal verbs 'go before' and 'lay before'.
1
PREP
If something happens
before
a particular date, time, or event, it happens earlier than that date, time, or event. □
2
PREP
[PREP
v-ing] If you do one thing
before
doing something else, you do it earlier than the other thing. □
3
ADV
[n ADV
] You use
before
when you are talking about time. For example, if something happened the day
before
a particular date or event, it happened during the previous day. □
4
CONJ
If you do something
before
someone else can do something, you do it when they have not yet done it. □
5
ADV
[ADV
after v] If someone has done something
before
, they have done it on a previous occasion. If someone has not done something
before
, they have never done it. □
6
CONJ
If there is a period of time or if several things are done
before
something happens, it takes that amount of time or effort for this thing to happen. □
7
CONJ
If a particular situation has to happen
before
something else happens, this situation must happen or exist in order for the other thing to happen. □
8
PREP
If someone is
before
something, they are in front of it. [FORMAL
] □
9
PREP
If you tell someone that one place is a certain distance
before
another, you mean that they will come to the first place first. □
10
PREP
If you appear or come
before
an official person or group, you go there and answer questions. □
11
PREP
If something happens
before
a particular person or group, it is seen by or happens while this person or this group is present. □
12
PREP
If you have something such as a journey, a task, or a stage of your life
before
you, you must do it or live through it in the future. □
13
PREP
When you want to say that one person or thing is more important than another, you can say that they come
before
the other person or thing. □
14before long → see long ➌