Meath
[meeth, meeth] /miθ, mið/
noun
1.
a county in Leinster, in the E Republic of Ireland. 902 sq. mi. (2335 sq. km). County seat: Trim.
/miːð; miːθ/
noun
1.
a county of E Republic of Ireland, in Leinster province on the Irish Sea: formerly a kingdom much larger than the present county; livestock farming. County town: Trim. Pop: 134 005 (2002). Area: 2338 sq km (903 sq miles)
county in Ireland, from Irish An Mhi, literally “the middle.”
Read Also:
- Meatball
[meet-bawl] /ˈmitˌbɔl/ noun 1. a small of ground , especially beef, often mixed with bread crumbs, seasonings, etc., before cooking. 2. Slang. an awkward, clumsy, or ineffectual person. /ˈmiːtˌbɔːl/ noun 1. minced beef, shaped into a ball before cooking 2. (US & Canadian, slang) a stupid or boring person n. 1801, from meat + ball […]
- Meat hammer
noun a hammerlike kitchen tool with gridlike teeth on one side of the head and possibly grooves on the other, used for tenderizing and flattening meat before cooking Examples The meat can be covered with waxed paper and pounded with the meat hammer. Word Origin cooking
- Meathead
[meet-hed] /ˈmitˌhɛd/ noun, Slang. 1. blockhead; dunce; fool. noun See musclehead n. “stupid person,” 1945, from meat + head (n.). noun A stupid person; meatball: The copper was a big meathead/ Take your hand off that door, you meathead (1945+)
- Meatheaded
adjective Stupid: some meatheaded tart (1949+)
- Meathooks
noun 1. Usually, meat hooks. Slang. hand or fist: “Get your meat hooks away from that cake! It’s for dessert.”. 2. a hook on which an animal carcass is hung after slaughter. noun The hands or fists; biscuit hooks (1919+)