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minute
1[ min-it ]
noun
- the sixtieth part (1/60) of an hour; sixty seconds.
- an indefinitely short space of time:
Wait a minute!
Come here this minute!
- minutes, the official record of the proceedings at a meeting of a society, committee, or other group.
- Chiefly British. a written summary, note, or memorandum.
- a rough draft, as of a document.
- Geometry. the sixtieth part of a degree of angular measure, often represented by the sign ′, as in 12° 10′, which is read as 12 degrees and 10 minutes. Compare angle 1( def 1c ).
verb (used with object)
- to time exactly, as movements or speed.
- to make a draft of (a document or the like).
- to record in a memorandum; note down.
- to enter in the minutes of a meeting.
adjective
- prepared in a very short time:
minute pudding.
minute
2[ mahy-noot, -nyoot, mi- ]
adjective
- extremely small, as in size, amount, extent, or degree:
minute differences.
Synonyms: minuscule, infinitesimal, tiny
Antonyms: large
- of minor importance; insignificant; trifling.
- attentive to or concerned with even the smallest details:
a minute examination.
minute
1/ maɪˈnjuːt /
adjective
- very small; diminutive; tiny
- unimportant; petty
- precise or detailed
a minute examination
minute
2/ ˈmɪnɪt /
noun
- a period of time equal to 60 seconds; one sixtieth of an hour
- Also calledminute of arc a unit of angular measure equal to one sixtieth of a degree ′
- any very short period of time; moment
- a short note or memorandum
- the distance that can be travelled in a minute
it's only two minutes away
- up to the minuteup-to-the-minute when prenominal very latest or newest
verb
- to record in minutes
to minute a meeting
- to time in terms of minutes
minute
/ mĭn′ĭt /
- A unit of time equal to 1 60 of an hour or 60 seconds.
- ◆ A sidereal minute is 1 60 of a sidereal hour, and a mean solar minute is 1 60 of a mean solar hour.
- See more at sidereal time
- A unit of angular measurement, such as longitude or right ascension, that is equal to 1 60 of a degree or 60 seconds.
Derived Forms
- miˈnuteness, noun
Other Words From
- un·min·ut·ed adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of minute1
Origin of minute2
Idioms and Phrases
- up to the minute, modern; up-to-date:
The building design is up to the minute.
More idioms and phrases containing minute
see at the last minute ; every minute counts ; just a minute ; mile a minute ; wait a minute .Synonym Study
Example Sentences
Whatever happened overtook them both within a minute or so of that altitude change request, and they were never heard from again.
“The play contains one five minute scene about James Hewitt,” Conway says.
I did a ten minute scene in his class: the guy who had gangrene in his leg in The Snows of Kilimanjaro.
Could you talk a minute about the notion of being an unreliable narrator?
“The beginning of that piece is one minute of cellos and violas,” he says.
After a minute's pause, while he stood painfully silent, she resumed in great emotion.
I assure you, no matter how beautifully we play any piece, the minute Liszt plays it, you would scarcely recognize it!
By the time I had done my toilette there was a tap at the door, and in another minute I was in the salle--manger.
The remaining one struggled for another half-minute, and flared up in one last, desperate effort.
Words are often everywhere as the minute-hands of the soul, more important than even the hour-hands of action.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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