foretime

foretime

(ˈfɔːˌtaɪm)
n
time already gone; the past
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

fore•time

(ˈfɔrˌtaɪm, ˈfoʊr-)

n.
former or past time.
[1530–40]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
We currently have two workshops; one in Valencia, Italy and another in Foretime, Germany.
Sentry's two Midtown conference locations, at 730 Third Avenue and 810 Seventh Avenue, served 64% of New York's Foretime 500 Companies in 2011.
In foretime, due to empirical methods, it has been reported that work on blockaded wound dressing began since human observed a blister healed faster if left unbroken.
(Perhaps that volume should bear, as a cautionary note, the title of one of his most engaging lyrics: "Don't Try This at Home.") Repeatedly in Muldoon's Oxford lectures we are asked to hear the unvoiced word that opens poems at once to their "foretime" and to their future, hearing, fur example, in "All Souls Night" in its (or her) absence "'Lee" (as in George Hyde) or "lees" (as in dregs").
[...] If it were possible to restore the broad acres of crumbling ruins to their foretime style and uses, there would even then be but the dead body of Charleston" (2).
Qashqavi did not say why the Foreign Ministry works so hard to free prisoners held foretimes the Iranian Judiciary works so hard to put behind bars.