different between meeten vs meeter

meeten

English

Etymology

From meet (fit, suitable) +? -en.

Verb

meeten (third-person singular simple present meetens, present participle meetening, simple past and past participle meetened)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) To make or become meet or fit; make suitable; adapt; prepare.
    • 1817, Francis Augustus Cox, Female Scripture biography:
      Let us accustom ourselves to contemplate the most eminent examples of this spirit, that, by daily imitating them, we may, through grace, be progressively "meetening" for the participation of their inheritance.
    • 1824, David Russell (of Dundee.), A familiar survey of the Old and New Covenants:
      [...] and were long proved by a series of various and often afflictive providences, in order to make known what was in their hearts, that they might be humbled ; and in other respects, meetened for the good which was prepared for them in their latter end, [...]
    • 1887, Henry Donald M. Spence- Jones, The pulpit commentary:
      Self-discipline meetens. Sorrow meetens. Suffering meetens.

Anagrams

  • mentee, temene

meeten From the web:

  • what does mittens mean
  • what has tom meeten been in
  • what mittens means


meeter

English

Etymology

meet +? -er

Noun

meeter (plural meeters)

  1. One who meets.

References

  • meeter in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

Adjective

meeter

  1. comparative form of meet: more meet

Anagrams

  • E-meter, remeet, teemer

Estonian

Noun

meeter (genitive meetri, partitive meetrit)

  1. meter (unit of measurement)

Declension

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

meeter From the web:

  • what meter
  • what meter is 4/4
  • what meter is 3/4
  • what meter is used in the following excerpt
  • what meter is cb radio
  • what metering mode to use
  • what meter is the raven written in
  • what meter did shakespeare write in
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like