prioritize
[pɹaɪˈoɹtaɪz]
UK: [pɹaɪˈɒɹtaɪz]
prioritize
English
Verb Top 31,059
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Definition
To value, do, or choose something first, or before other things.
Etymology
From priority + -ize. First attested in 1967 as U.S. government jargon, becoming more widespread through the 1970s and ’80s, but still denounced as officialese by purists into the 1990s.
Example Sentences
- "When I don't have time to buy everything at the store, I prioritize fresh fruit and vegetables over foods like rice or noodles."
- "Boeing's article stressed prioritizing roll control during recovery from nose-down bank upsets unless the airplane was in a stall condition; if the airplane was stalled, Boeing recommended recovering from the stall before recovering from the upset. The article described the nose-down upset recovery technique as follows: "Reduce angle of attack. This unloads the wing, allows the airplane to accelerate, which reduces rudder deflection and improves lateral control ability. […]""
- "In 2005 Houston Methodist Hospital (HMH) established a Sepsis Care Management Performance Improvement (CMPI) committee and prioritized sepsis detection and management in its ICUs, using the approaches of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign."
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