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''forebear'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20260320113731-00-⌔

forebear - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

Noun

forebear (plural forebears)

  • An ancestor.
    • ✤ Hypernym: predecessor
    • One day, among the days, he bethought him of this and fell lamenting for that the most part of his existence was past and he had not been vouchsafed a son, to inherit the kingdom after him, even as he had inherited it from his fathers and forebears; by reason whereof there betided him sore cark and care and chagrin exceeding.1
    • Sirs, I am quite sure that the King of England’s forbears rightly and justly lost the conquered lands that I hold […]2
    • One does not take one’s family name therefrom, and again the position of the mother in that group is determined through her father and his male forbears in turn; this too is a patrilineal group.3
    • THE LONDON BRIGHTON & SOUTH COAST RAILWAY. By C. Hamilton Ellis. Ian Allan. 30s. […] In the course of its pages the author runs through the whole gamut of the locomotives that have during the period under review run on the rails of the L.B. & S.C. and its forebears.4
    • Beginning with the bald declaration “I think I was cold in the womb,” the speaker in “The Forbears” then decides that his brother (who died soon after birth) must also have been cold in the womb, like his grandfather John and the forbears who antedated John.5
    • Now we are liberal with our innermost secrets, spraying them into the public ether with a generosity our forebears could not have imagined. Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don’t know and will never meet.6

Verb

forebear (third-person singular simple present forebears, present participle forebearing, simple past forebore, past participle foreborne)

  • Obsolete spelling of forbear.

Etymology 1

Late 15th century, from fore- +‎ beer (“one who is or exists”, literally “be -er”).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA: /ˈfɔːˌbɛə/
  • Audio (Southern England): 🔊
  • (General American) IPA: /ˈfɔɹˌbɛɚ/

Etymology 2

Printed 2026-06-28.

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Footnotes

  1. 1885, Richard F. Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Night 566:

  2. [1906] 2004, Memoirs of the Lord of Joinville, Ethel Wedgwood tr.

  3. [1936] 2004, Raymond William Firth, We the Tikopia [1]

  4. 1960 December, “New reading on railways”, in Trains Illustrated, page 776:

  5. 1997, H. L. Hix, Understanding W. S. Merwin:

  6. 2013 June 7, Jonathan Freedland, “Obama is like Apple, Google and Facebook: a once hip brand tainted by Prism”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 189, number 1, archived from the original on 13 March 2022, page 18:

Link to original

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