Menat
[mey-naht] /ˈmeɪ nɑt/
noun
1.
an amulet worn by certain Egyptians in ancient times to secure divine protection and to ensure fertility.
Read Also:
- Menazon
[men-uh-zon] /ˈmɛn əˌzɒn/ noun, Chemistry. 1. a colorless, crystalline compound, C 6 H 1 2 N 5 O 2 PS 2 , used as a systemic insecticide, especially for control of aphids.
- Men-children
[men-chil-druh n, -drin] /ˈmɛnˌtʃɪl drən, -drɪn/ noun 1. plural of . [man-chahyld] /ˈmænˌtʃaɪld/ noun, plural men-children. 1. a male child; boy; son.
- Menchu
[men-choo] /mɛnˈtʃu/ noun 1. Rigoberta [ree-guh-ber-tuh] /ˌri gəˈbɛr tə/ (Show IPA), born 1959, Guatemalan author and social reformer: Nobel prize 1992.
- Mencius
[men-shee-uh s] /ˈmɛn ʃi əs/ noun 1. c380–289 b.c, Chinese philosopher. /ˈmɛnʃɪəs; -ʃəs/ noun 1. Chinese name Mengzi or Meng-tze. ?372–?289 bc, Chinese philosopher, who propounded the ethical system of Confucius
- Mencken
[meng-kuh n] /ˈmɛŋ kən/ noun 1. H(enry) L(ouis) 1880–1956, U.S. writer, editor, and critic. /ˈmɛŋkən/ noun 1. H(enry) L(ouis). 1880–1956, US journalist and literary critic, noted for The American Language (1919): editor of the Smart Set and the American Mercury, which he founded (1924)