Meacon
[mee-kuh n] /ˈmi kən/
verb (used with object)
1.
to give false signals to (electronic navigational equipment), as by means of a radio transmitter.
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[me-ah koo l-pah; English mey-uh kuhl-puh, mee-uh] /ˈmɛ ɑ ˈkʊl pɑ; English ˈmeɪ ə ˈkʌl pə, ˈmi ə/ Latin. 1. through my fault; my fault (used as an acknowledgment of one’s responsibility). /ˈmeɪɑː ˈkʊlpɑː/ uknown 1. an acknowledgment of guilt Latin, literally “I am to blame,” a phrase from the prayer of confession in the […]
- Mead
[meed] /mid/ noun 1. an alcoholic liquor made by fermenting honey and water. 2. any of various nonalcoholic beverages. [meed] /mid/ noun, Archaic. 1. . [meed] /mid/ noun 1. George Herbert, 1863–1931, U.S. philosopher and author. 2. Margaret, 1901–78, U.S. anthropologist. 3. Lake, a lake in NW Arizona and SE Nevada, formed 1936 by Hoover […]
- Meade
[meed] /mid/ noun 1. George Gordon, 1815–72, Union general in the American Civil War. 2. James Edward, 1907–1995, British economist: Nobel prize 1977. /miːd/ noun 1. George Gordon. 1815–72, Union general in the American Civil War. He commanded the Army of the Potomac, defeating the Confederates at Gettysburg (1863)
- Meadow
[med-oh] /ˈmɛd oʊ/ noun 1. a tract of grassland used for pasture or serving as a hayfield. 2. a tract of grassland in an upland area near the timberline. /ˈmɛdəʊ/ noun 1. an area of grassland, often used for hay or for grazing of animals 2. a low-lying piece of grassland, often boggy and near […]
- Meadow-beauty
noun 1. any of several North American plants of the genus Rhexia, especially R. mariana or R. virginica, having showy rose-pink flowers with eight prominent bright yellow stamens.