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met "

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    • \ ˈmēt 

    • \ ˈhāl-ˌfe-lō-ˌwel-ˈmet 

    • \ ˈmēt-ˌkyüt \

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    [Abbreviation]  | "met" 


    1: meteorological; meteorology

    2: metropolitan

    [Verb]  | "meet" | \ ˈmēt \


    1: to come into the presence of for the first time : to be introduced to or become acquainted with

    2: to come together with especially at a particular time or place

    3: to come into contact or conjunction with : join


    Origin: before 12th century ;

     Middle English meten, from Old English mētan; akin to Old English gemōt assembly {mat|moot:3|};

    [Prefix]  | "meta-" 


    1: occurring later than or in succession to : after

    2: situated behind or beyond

    3: later or more highly organized or specialized form of


    Origin: 

     New Latin & Medieval Latin, from Latin or Greek; Latin, from Greek, among, with, after, from meta among, with, after; akin to Old English mid, mith with, Old High German mit;

    [Adjective]  | "hail-fel*low-well-met" | \ ˈhāl-ˌfe-lō-ˌwel-ˈmet \


    1: heartily friendly and informal : comradely


    Origin: 1581 ;

     From the archaic salutation "Hail, fellow! Well met!";

    [Noun]  | "gaze" 


    1: a fixed intent look

    2: the collective preferences and expectations of a usually privileged social group especially when imposed as a standard or norm on other groups


    Origin: 1566 ;

     Derivative of {see: |gaze:1|gaze:1};

    [Noun]  | "meet-cute" | \ ˈmēt-ˌkyüt \


    1: a cute, charming, or amusing first encounter between romantic partners (as in a movie)


    Origin: 1952 ;

    [Phrasal verb]  | "meet up with" 


    1: to come together with (someone) : to go to a place to be with (someone)

    [Verb]  | "met" 


    1: to come upon face-to-face or as if face-to-face;


      * e.g., " ... we never once met another car on that lonely country road "





    2: to come together into one body or place;


      * e.g., " ... we'll meet for dinner, with a discussion to follow, next week "





    3: to come upon unexpectedly or by chance;


      * e.g., " ... met her future husband at a party "





    [Verb]  | "meet" 


    1: to come upon face-to-face or as if face-to-face;


      * e.g., " ... we never once met another car on that lonely country road "





    2: to come together into one body or place;


      * e.g., " ... we'll meet for dinner, with a discussion to follow, next week "





    3: to come upon unexpectedly or by chance;


      * e.g., " ... met her future husband at a party "





    [Noun]  | "hail-fellow-well-met" 


    [Adjective]  | "hail-fellow-well-met" 


    1: having or showing kindly feeling and sincere interest;


      * e.g., " ... a hail-fellow-well-met politician who genuinely enjoys pressing the flesh "





     [ "met" ]

    1: slang word for french kissing

      * e.g.,  ... i met him around the back of the shop yesterday 

     [ "met" ]

    1: Slang word that is short for metro.

      * e.g.,  ... The football team got into it wit some bammas from the met. 

     [ "met" ]

    1: When one is placed in a difficult situation from which is it near enough impossible to escape meeting when one will get met in the future some time. meet when one will go out of their way to ensure another person gets met.

      * e.g.,  ... I got met by my doctor during the teaching session. 

     [ "met" ]

    1: Verb: U.K. version of making out; kissing with tongues, generally for a long period of time; having a good time with someone by kissing

      * e.g.,  ... Lily met with Zach at the party last night. 

     [ "met" ]

    1:  Abbreviation for man-pet

      * e.g.,  ... "Hey Steve! Check out this new met I adopted at the club last night! I'm going to go get him a collar and leash him up right now!" 


     [ "met" ]

    2:  Abbreviation for metrosexual

     [ "the met" ]

    1: the met is columbia south carolina

      * e.g.,  ... cj- “ where you from?” 

     [ "A Met" ]

    1: Someone unable to perform up to par when the situation requires top performance. Origin: Cole Hamels labelling the New York Mets choke artists.

      * e.g.,  ... Bill: "I thought John smashed that girl Kim." 

     [ "Met" ]

    1: Short for meticulous. A term used to describe something as "cool", "neat" or "awesome".

      * e.g.,  ... Wow, those new sunglasses are really met. 

     [ "METS" ]

    1: An acronymn standing for: (the) Most Excellent Team in Sports

      * e.g.,  ... The New York Yankees are just not the METS... therefore they suck. 

     [ "mets" ]

    1: Better than the other New York baseball team with fans that actually knows about baseball and not just bunch of bandwagon jumpers. Here is the real meaning for the METS acronym.

      * e.g.,  ... The skankees SUCK, lets go METS 


     [ "mets" ]

    2: Most


     [ "mets" ]

    3: Exciting


     [ "mets" ]

    4: Team in


     [ "mets" ]

    5: Sports

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