Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun The act or process or an instance of coming together; an encounter.
- noun An assembly or gathering of people, as for a business, social, or religious purpose.
- idiom (meeting of the minds) Agreement; concord.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun plural In mining, the point in a mine-shaft where the ascending and descending cages meet. When the coal was raised in creels or corves the shaft was bulged at the meetings.
- noun A coming together; an interview: as, a happy meeting of friends.
- noun An assembly; a congregation; a collection of people; a convention: as, a social, religious, or political meeting; the meeting adjourned till the next day: applied in the United States, especially in rural districts, to any assemblage for religious worship, and in England and Ireland to one of dissenters from the established church; specifically, an assembly of Friends for religious purposes: as, to go to meeting.
- noun A conflux, as of rivers; a confluence; a joining, as of lines; junction; union.
- noun A hostile encounter; a duel.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun A coming together; an assembling.
- noun A junction, crossing, or union.
- noun A congregation; a collection of people; a convention
- noun An assembly for worship; ; -- in England, applied distinctively and disparagingly to the worshiping assemblies of Dissenters.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb Present participle of
meet . - noun A
gathering of people/parties for a purpose. - noun The people at such a gathering, as a collective.
- noun An
encounter between people, even accidental. - noun A place or instance of
junction or intersection.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a place where things merge or flow together (especially rivers)
- noun a casual or unexpected convergence
- noun a formally arranged gathering
- noun the social act of assembling for some common purpose
- noun the act of joining together as one
- noun a small informal social gathering
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
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Examples
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I imagine that most writers blanch and shudder upon meeting meeting meeting*, then reach for the internalized thesaurus...
On a meeting meeting DC 2008
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We look forward to the next Senior Officials meeting to be held next year in Cartagena, Colombia and the Ministerial meeting� in the Philippines in 2003.
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The next meeting, in this case, would be an adjourned meeting of the same session.
Chapter 11. Miscellaneous. 63. A Session Henry Martyn 1915
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This offer I cheerfully accepted, and I thought no more of the business till I saw it publicly announced that a meeting would be held on Portsdown-Hill, on the 10th day of February, _the very day that was fixed for holding the third Spafields meeting_; and that was done without consulting or saying
Memoirs of Henry Hunt, Esq. — Volume 3 Henry Hunt 1804
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So that the meeting of proletarian and bourgeois, when they do succeed in meeting, is not always the embrace of long-lost brothers; too often it is the clash of alien cultures which can only meet in war.
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The use of the term "meeting" in these rules has the same traditional meaning and does not include less formal caucuses or working sessions.
NPR Topics: News 2011
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The use of the term "meeting" in these rules has the same traditional meaning and does not include less formal caucuses or working sessions.
NPR Topics: News 2011
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But at the Sept. 8 session, supercommittee members decided the term "meeting" would apply only to a gathering for the actual transaction of business, such as a vote.
The Seattle Times 2011
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The use of the term "meeting" in these rules has the same traditional meaning and does not include less formal caucuses or working sessions.
NPR Topics: News 2011
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To make an issue out of the brand of beer to be served at this meeting is absolutley absurd.
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