longtime
English
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editEtymology
editAdjective
editlongtime (comparative more longtime, superlative most longtime)
- Having endured for a long period of time.
- My longtime friend, since birth actually, called and gently broke the bad news to me.
- longtime favorite
- 2000 October 8, James Poniewozik, “Operating System”, in The New York Times[1]:
- It was an outgrowth of Jobs's embrace of 60's counterculturalism -- he was a longtime, and rather irritating, vegetarian and lived in a commune.
- 2020 June 22, Trudy Ring, “Mondaire Jones Could Be the Nation's First Black Gay Congressman”, in The Advocate[2]:
- Criminal justice reform has become a national topic of discussion given recent police killings of Black men, and Jones points out that he's been a longtime activist on this issue, with his experience in Palo Alto and as an NAACP youth organizer. Also, he notes, as a Black man, "People like me are overpoliced, overarrested, overprosecuted."
Synonyms
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edithaving endured for long
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Adverb
editlongtime (comparative more longtime, superlative most longtime)
- Having been for a long time
- longtime married