Home

Former

Former is an English adjective commonly used to indicate that something or someone previously held a position, status, or condition. It can also function as part of fixed phrases that refer to items already mentioned, such as in the pronouns the former and the latter, which point to the first or second of two referenced subjects.

As a modifier, former typically precedes the noun it describes: a former president, former colleagues, former

In discourse, the terms the former and the latter are used to distinguish between two or more

Etymology traces to long-standing Middle English usage, rooted in the sense of former or formerly as indicating

habits.
It
signals
that
the
described
role
or
state
applied
in
the
past
but
is
no
longer
in
effect.
In
everyday
writing,
former
is
often
paired
with
ex-
as
a
prefix
for
people
(ex-president)
or
with
ex-
for
things
(ex-house,
ex-organization),
though
ex-
can
have
a
more
informal
or
colloquial
tone.
Former
tends
to
be
slightly
more
formal
and
is
common
in
journalism,
academia,
and
official
contexts.
previously
mentioned
items.
The
former
refers
to
the
first
item,
while
the
latter
refers
to
the
last.
Examples:
“Among
the
two
proposals,
the
former
emphasizes
cost,
the
latter
emphasizes
speed.”
This
usage
helps
avoid
repetition
but
requires
clear
antecedents.
past
state.
The
word
exists
as
a
convenient,
formal
way
to
denote
something
that
no
longer
applies,
without
specifying
the
exact
time
elapsed.