a priori vs entire

a priori

adj
  • Presumed without analysis. 

  • Self-evident, intuitively obvious. 

  • Based on hypothesis and theory rather than experiment or empirical evidence. 

  • Developed entirely from scratch, without deriving it from existing languages. 

adv
  • In a way based on theoretical deduction rather than empirical observation. 

entire

adj
  • Not gelded. 

  • Morally whole; pure; sheer. 

  • Complex-differentiable on all of ℂ. 

  • Whole; complete. 

  • Having a smooth margin without any indentation. 

  • Consisting of a single piece, as a corolla. 

  • Internal; interior. 

noun
  • An uncastrated horse; a stallion. 

  • Porter or stout as delivered from the brewery. 

  • A complete envelope with stamps and all official markings: (prior to the use of envelopes) a page folded and posted. 

How often have the words a priori and entire occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )