Mattered


[mat-er] /ˈmæt ər/

noun
1.
the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed:
the matter of which the earth is made.
2.
physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, especially as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like.
3.
something that occupies space.
4.
a particular kind of substance:
coloring matter.
5.
a situation, state, affair, or business:
a trivial matter.
6.
an amount or extent reckoned approximately:
a matter of 10 miles.
7.
something of consequence:
matter for serious thought.
8.
importance or significance:
decisions of little matter.
9.
difficulty; trouble (usually preceded by the):
There is something the matter.
10.
ground, reason, or cause:
a matter for complaint.
11.
the material or substance of a discourse, book, etc., often as distinguished from its form.
12.
things put down in words, especially printed:
reading matter.
13.
things sent by mail:
postal matter.
14.
a substance discharged by a living body, especially pus.
15.
Philosophy.

16.
Law. statement or allegation.
17.
Printing.

18.
Christian Science. the concept of substance shaped by the limitations of the human mind.
verb (used without object)
19.
to be of importance; signify:
It matters little.
20.
Pathology. to suppurate.
Idioms
21.
a matter of life and death, something of vital or crucial importance.
22.
as a matter of fact, in reality; actually; in fact:
As a matter of fact, there is no substance to that rumor.
23.
for that matter, as far as that is concerned; as for that:
For that matter, you are no better qualified to judge than I.
Also, for the matter of that.
24.
no matter,

/ˈmætə/
noun
1.
that which makes up something, esp a physical object; material
2.
substance that occupies space and has mass, as distinguished from substance that is mental, spiritual, etc
3.
substance of a specified type: vegetable matter, reading matter
4.
sometimes foll by of or for. thing; affair; concern; question: a matter of taste, several matters to attend to, no laughing matter
5.
a quantity or amount: a matter of a few pence
6.
the content of written or verbal material as distinct from its style or form
7.
(used with a negative) importance; consequence
8.
(philosophy) (in the writings of Aristotle and the Scholastics) that which is itself formless but can receive form and become substance
9.
(philosophy) (in the Cartesian tradition) one of two basic modes of existence, the other being mind: matter being extended in space as well as time
10.
(printing)

11.
a secretion or discharge, such as pus
12.
(law)

13.
for that matter, as regards that
14.
See grey matter
15.
no matter

16.
the matter, wrong; the trouble: there’s nothing the matter
verb (intransitive)
17.
to be of consequence or importance
18.
to form and discharge pus
n.

c.1200, materie, “subject of thought, speech, or expression,” from Anglo-French matere, Old French matere “subject, theme, topic; substance, content, material; character, education” (12c., Modern French matière), from Latin materia “substance from which something is made,” also “hard inner wood of a tree” (cf. Portuguese madeira “wood”), from mater “origin, source, mother” (see mother (n.1)). Or, on another theory, it represents *dmateria, from PIE root *dem-/*dom- (cf. Latin domus “house,” English timber). With sense development in Latin influenced by Greek hyle, of which it was the equivalent in philosophy.

Meaning “physical substance generally, matter, material” is early 14c.; that of “substance of which some specific object is made or consists of” is attested from late 14c. That of “piece of business, affair, activity, situation, circumstance” is from late 14c. From mid-14c. as “subject of a literary work, content of what is written, main theme.” Also in Middle English as “cause, reasons, ground; essential character; field of investigation.”

Matter of course “something expected” attested from 1739. For that matter attested from 1670s. What is the matter “what concerns (someone), the cause of the difficulty” is attested from mid-15c. To make no matter “be no difference to” also is mid-15c.
v.

“to be of importance or consequence,” 1580s, from matter (n.). Related: Mattered; mattering.

matter mat·ter (māt’ər)
n.

matter
(māt’ər)
Something that has mass. Most of the matter in the universe is composed of atoms which are themselves composed of subatomic particles. See also energy, state of matter.

In physics, something that has mass and is distinct from energy. (See phases of matter.)

Related Terms

gray matter

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