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  1. Dictionary
    prim·i·tive
    /ˈprimədiv/

    adjective

    noun

    • 1. a person belonging to a preliterate, nonindustrial society: "reports of travelers and missionaries described contemporary primitives"
    • 2. a pre-Renaissance painter.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. 1. a. : not derived : original, primary. b. : assumed as a basis. especially : axiomatic. primitive concepts. 2. a. : of or relating to the earliest age or period : primeval. the primitive church. b. : closely approximating an early ancestral type : little evolved. primitive mammals. c.

  3. relating to human society at a very early stage of development, with people living in a simple way without machines or a writing system: Primitive races colonized these islands 2,000 years ago. primitive man.

  4. Primitive means belonging to a society in which people live in a very simple way, usually without industries or a writing system.

  5. Primitive definition: being the first or earliest of the kind or in existence, especially in an early age of the world. See examples of PRIMITIVE used in a sentence.

  6. being or occurring at an early stage of development. adjective. of or created by one without formal training; simple or naive in style. “ primitive art such as that by Grandma Moses is often colorful and striking”

  7. primitives. A person belonging to a nonindustrial, often tribal society, especially a society characterized by a low level of economic or technological complexity. A primitive person or thing. An artist or a work of art that shows ingenuousness and lack of formal training.

  8. very simple and old-fashioned, especially when something is also not convenient and comfortable synonym crude. The methods of communication used during the war were primitive by today's standards. The facilities on the campsite were very primitive. Transport remained very primitive.