From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishprimatepri‧mate /ˈpraɪmeɪt/ noun [countable] HBAa member of the group of animals that includes humans and monkeys
Examples from the Corpus
primate• In Sarawak, travelers will visit Bako National Park, known for its birds, primates and pitcher plants.• Presumably, these relatively open habitats favored larger groups as they did for chimps and baboons, the two other open-country primates.• Here we show that the P3A exon is present only in primates and man and it is conserved through primate evolution.• In primates it seems to be based on social rank.• Other primates laugh by panting rapidly.• Demonstrations have been held at the primate centre run by the University of California-Davis.• Providing one sticks to primates there is much scope for successful extrapolation.• However, the hierarchies of hens and of various primates share many features in common.PrimatePri‧mate /ˈpraɪmət/ noun [countable] RRCthe most important priest in a country, especially in the Church of England SYN archbishopOrigin primate (1100-1200) Old French primat, from Medieval Latin primas “archbishop”, from Latin, “leader”, from primus; → PRIME1