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proprietary
[ pruh-prahy-i-ter-ee ]
adjective
- belonging to a proprietor.
- being a proprietor; holding property:
the proprietary class.
- pertaining to property or ownership:
proprietary wealth.
- belonging or controlled as property.
- (of a brand name, product, service, formula, etc.) protected by a patent, copyright, or trademark:
proprietary drugs; a proprietary name; a proprietary logo; a proprietary blend of ingredients.
- privately owned and operated for profit:
proprietary hospitals.
noun
- an owner or proprietor.
- a body of proprietors.
- American History. the grantee or owner, or one of the grantees or owners, of a proprietary colony.
- something owned, especially real estate.
- a proprietary medicine.
- Also called proprietary school. a school organized as a profit-making venture primarily to teach vocational skills or self-improvement techniques.
proprietary
/ prəˈpraɪɪtərɪ; -trɪ /
adjective
- of, relating to, or belonging to property or proprietors
- privately owned and controlled
- med of or denoting a drug or agent manufactured and distributed under a trade name Compare ethical
noun
- med a proprietary drug or agent
- a proprietor or proprietors collectively
- right to property
- property owned
- Also calledlord proprietary (in Colonial America) an owner, governor, or grantee of a proprietary colony
Derived Forms
- proˈprietarily, adverb
Other Words From
- pro·pri·e·tar·i·ly [pr, uh, -prahy-i-, tair, -i-lee, -, prahy, -i-ter-], adverb
- nonpro·prie·tary adjective noun plural nonproprietaries
Word History and Origins
Origin of proprietary1
Word History and Origins
Origin of proprietary1
Example Sentences
In particular, Davis cited 3D-printed artworks, which can contain proprietary compounds with unknown additives, as well as works by artists such as Alvin D. Loving Jr. and Arman, who sometimes employed plastics.
News uses a proprietary formula that incorporates a host of metrics to sort all manner of higher education institutions and programs.
This realizes what Joan Didion describes in her 2000 New Yorker essay about the “unusual bonding” and “proprietary intimacy” Stewart creates with us — her people, her consumers, her devourers.
Any “proprietary information” uncovered during these investigations would not be subject to the Freedom of Information Act.
Insurers use proprietary systems to calculate these costs, so you may also want to check with two or three other companies.
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