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mere
1[ meer ]
adjective
- being nothing more nor better than:
a mere pittance;
He is still a mere child.
- Obsolete.
- pure and unmixed, as wine, a people, or a language.
- fully as much as what is specified; completely fulfilled or developed; absolute.
mere
2[ meer ]
noun
- Chiefly British Dialect. a lake or pond.
- Obsolete. any body of sea water.
mere
3[ meer ]
noun
- a boundary or boundary marker.
mère
4[ mer; English mair ]
noun
-mere
5- a combining form meaning “part,” used in the formation of compound words:
blastomere.
mere
1/ mɪə /
noun
- archaic.a boundary or boundary marker
-mere
2combining form
- indicating a part or division
blastomere
mere
3/ ˈmɛrɪ /
noun
- a short flat striking weapon
mere
4/ mɪə /
noun
- archaic.a lake or marsh
- obsolete.the sea or an inlet of it
mere
5/ mɪə /
adjective
- being nothing more than something specified
she is a mere child
–mere
- A suffix meaning “part” or “segment,” as in blastomere, one of the cells that form a blastula.
Derived Forms
- -meric, combining_form:in_adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of mere1
Origin of mere2
Origin of mere3
Origin of mere4
Word History and Origins
Origin of mere1
Origin of mere2
Origin of mere3
Origin of mere4
Origin of mere5
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Fortunately, the problem was solved mere moments before the show started.
At first, his mentions of yagé are fleeting, mere ways of making interesting conversation with a lover who only carries a passing interest in Lee.
But within a mere 30 million years, dinosaurs around the globe took over the niches formerly occupied by rivals.
The M dwarfs are low-mass stars that have a mere fraction of the Sun's mass and luminosity.
Ordinarily that would have been a mere consolation and City would have closed out the game, but Gvardiol had another moment to forget eight minutes from time.
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