Messaline
[mes-uh-leen, mes-uh-leen] /ˌmɛs əˈlin, ˈmɛs əˌlin/
noun
1.
a thin, soft silk with a twill or satin weave.
/ˌmɛsəˈliːn; ˈmɛsəˌliːn/
noun
1.
a light lustrous twilled-silk fabric
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- Messapian
[muh-sey-pik, -sap-ik] /məˈseɪ pɪk, -ˈsæp ɪk/ noun 1. an Indo-European language that was spoken in what is now SE Italy and written with an alphabet derived from that of Greek. /məˈseɪpɪən/ noun 1. a scantily recorded language of an ancient people of Calabria (the Messapii), thought by some to be related to ancient Illyrian
- Messapic
[muh-sey-pik, -sap-ik] /məˈseɪ pɪk, -ˈsæp ɪk/ noun 1. an Indo-European language that was spoken in what is now SE Italy and written with an alphabet derived from that of Greek.
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noun, Military. 1. a bugle call for mess.
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/mes-dos/ (Or MS-DOG, Messy-DOS, mess-dross, mess-loss, mush-dos) Derisory term for MS-DOS. Often followed by the ritual banishing “Just say No!” Most hackers (even many MS-DOS hackers) loathe MS-DOS for its single-tasking nature, its limits on application size, its nasty primitive interface, and its ties to IBMness (see fear and loathing). In Ireland and the UK […]