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meet (v.)

 Middle English mēten, from Old English metan "to find, find out; fall in with, encounter, come into the same place with; obtain," from Proto-Germanic *motjanan (source also of Old Norse mæta, Old Frisian meta, Old Saxon motian "to meet," Gothic gamotijan), from PIE root *mod- "to meet, assemble." Related to Old English gemot "meeting."

By c. 1300, of things, "to come into physical contact with, join by touching or uniting with;" also, of persons, "come together by approaching from the opposite direction; come into collision with, combat." Abstractly, "to come upon, encounter (as in meet with approval, meet one's destiny) by late 14c. Sense of "come into conformity with, be or act in agreement with" (as in meet expectations) is by 1690s.

Intransitive sense, of people, "to come together" is from mid-14c.; of members of an organized body or society, "to assemble," by 1520s. Related: Met; meeting. To meet (someone) halfway in the figurative sense "make mutual and equal concessions to" is from 1620s. Well met as a salutation of compliment is by mid-15c.

meet (adj.)

c. 1300, mēte, "having the right shape or size," from Old English gemæte, Anglian *gemete, "suitable, having the same dimensions," from Proto-Germanic *ga-mætijaz (source also of Old Norse mætr, Old High German gimagi, German gemäß "suitable"), from collective prefix *ga- + PIE root *med- "take appropriate measures." The formation is the same as that of commensurate. Meaning "proper, appropriate" is from early 14c.; that of "fit (to do something)" is from late 14c.

The mountain sheep are sweeter,
But the valley sheep are fatter;
We therefore deem'd it meeter
To carry off the latter.
[Thomas Love Peacock, from "The War-song of Dinas Vawr"]

meet (n.)

1831 in the sporting sense, "a gathering of huntsmen for fox-hunting," from meet (v.). Later of bicyclists gathering for a ride, etc.

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Definitions of meet from WordNet
1
meet (v.)
come together;
I'll probably see you at the meeting
Synonyms: run into / encounter / run across / come across / see
meet (v.)
get together socially or for a specific purpose;
Synonyms: get together
meet (v.)
be adjacent or come together;
Synonyms: converge
meet (v.)
fill, satisfy or meet a want or need or condtion ro restriction;
does this paper meet the requirements for the degree?
meet a need
Synonyms: fit / conform to / satisfy / fill / fulfill / fulfil
meet (v.)
collect in one place;
Synonyms: gather / assemble / forgather / foregather
meet (v.)
get to know; get acquainted with;
I met this really handsome guy at a bar last night!
we met in Singapore
meet (v.)
meet by design; be present at the arrival of;
Can you meet me at the train station?
meet (v.)
contend against an opponent in a sport, game, or battle;
Synonyms: encounter / play / take on
meet (v.)
experience as a reaction;
My proposal met with much opposition
Synonyms: encounter / receive
meet (v.)
undergo or suffer;
meet a violent death
Synonyms: suffer
meet (v.)
be in direct physical contact with; make contact;
Synonyms: touch / adjoin / contact
2
meet (n.)
a meeting at which a number of athletic contests are held;
Synonyms: sports meeting
3
meet (adj.)
being precisely fitting and right;
it is only meet that she should be seated first
Synonyms: fitting
From wordnet.princeton.edu