secondary

[ˈsɛkəndərɪ,-drɪ]
adj
one grade or step after the first; not primary
derived from or depending on what is primary, original, or first
a secondary source
below the first in rank, importance, etc; not of major importance
of or relating to the education of young people between the ages of 11 and 18
secondary education
(of the flight feathers of a bird's wing) growing from the ulna
being the part of an electric circuit, such as a transformer or induction coil, in which a current is induced by a changing current in a neighbouring coil.(of a current) flowing in such a circuit.See primary
(of an industry) involving the manufacture of goods from raw materialsSee primary See tertiary
(of minerals) formed by the alteration of pre-existing minerals
(of an organic compound) having a functional group attached to a carbon atom that is attached to one hydrogen atom and two other groups.(of an amine) having only two organic groups attached to a nitrogen atom; containing the group NH.(of a salt) derived from a tribasic acid by replacement of two acidic hydrogen atoms with metal atoms or electropositive groups
derived from a word that is itself a derivation from another word. Thus, lovably comes from lovable and is a secondary derivative from love.(of a tense in Latin, Greek, or Sanskrit) another word for historic
n
a person or thing that is secondary
a subordinate, deputy, or inferior
a secondary coil, winding, inductance, or current in an electric circuit
any of the flight feathers that grow from the ulna of a bird's wingSee primary
a celestial body that orbits around a specified primary body
the moon is the secondary of the earth
a cancerous growth in some part of the body away from the site of the original tumour
cornerbacks and safeties collectively.their area in the field
short for secondary colour