| meti | He's not a very meticulous guy. |
| meti | It is not necessary to be meticulous. |
| meti | The coup was meticulously executed. |
| metic | (n) an alien who paid a fee to reside in an ancient Greek city |
| metical | (n) the basic unit of money in Mozambique; equal to 100 centavos |
| meticulous | (adj) marked by precise accordance with details, Syn. punctilious, Example: meticulous research; punctilious in his attention to rules of etiquette |
| meticulous | (adj) marked by extreme care in treatment of details, Example: a meticulous craftsman; almost worryingly meticulous in his business formalities |
| meticulously | (adv) in a meticulous manner, Example: the set was meticulously authentic |
| meticulousness | (n) strict attention to minute details, Syn. scrupulousness, meticulosity, punctiliousness |
| metier | (n) an occupation for which you are especially well suited, Syn. medium, Example: in law he found his true metier |
| metis | (n) a person in western Canada who is of Caucasian and American Indian ancestry |
| Metic | n. [ Gr. &unr_;, prop., changing one's abode; &unr_;, indicating change + &unr_; house, abode: cf. L. metoecus, F. métèque. ] (Gr. Antiq.) A sojourner; an immigrant; an alien resident in a Grecian city, but not a citizen. Mitford. [ 1913 Webster ] The whole force of Athens, metics as well as citizens, and all the strangers who were then in the city. Jowett (Thucyd. ). [ 1913 Webster ] |
| meticulosity | n. strict attention to minute details; the quality of being meticulous. |
| Meticulous | a. [ L. meticulosus, fr. metus fear: cf. F. méticuleux. ] Timid; fearful. [ archaic ] [ 1913 Webster ] -- |
| Metier | ‖n. [ F. ] Not only is it the business of no one to preach the truth but it is the métier of many to conceal it. A. R. Colquhoun. [ Webster 1913 Suppl. ] |
| Metisse | |
| Metive | |
| Metier { n } | profession; job [Add to Longdo] |