MEW


Meaning of MEW in English

I. ˈmyü noun

also mew gull

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English mǣw; akin to Old Saxon mēw gull, Middle Dutch meeuw, Old Norse mār; probably of imit origin

: gull ; especially : the common European gull ( Larus canus)

II. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English mewen, of imitative origin

intransitive verb

1. : meow 1

2. : to make the natural noise of a gull

gulls now swooped and mewed round the ship — Ngaio Marsh

transitive verb

: to utter by mewing : meow

mewing pitiful cries

III. noun

( -s )

: meow

gave a quick consolatory mew of understanding — Hortense Calisher

IV. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English muwe, mewe, from Middle French mue, from muer to molt — more at mew VI

1. : a cage for hawks especially while molting

2.

a. : a coop or cage for fattening animals ; especially : a pen for fattening fowls

b. dialect chiefly England : a breeding cage (as for canaries)

3.

a. obsolete : confinement : a place of confinement

b. : a secret place : a place of retirement : hideaway

I've been three weeks shut within my mew — Robert Browning

4. mews plural but usually singular in construction , chiefly Britain

a.

(1) : stables ; especially : a range of stables usually with carriage houses and living quarters built around a yard, court, or street

(2) : living quarters or housing developed from such stables

b. : the court or street upon which such stables or the dwellings developed from them open : alley , back street

c. : a row or group of garages

V. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English muwen, mewen, from muwe mewe, n.

1.

a. obsolete : to shut in or coop up for fattening — used especially of fowl

b. : to shut or lock in : confine — often used with up

better … than sitting mewed in a stuffy bedroom with a prayer book — Virginia Woolf

a group of men mewed up for years in a draughty barrack — Noel Coward

2. : to put or keep (a hawk) in a mew especially in molting time

VI. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English muwen, from Middle French muer to molt, change, from Latin mutare to change — more at miss

transitive verb

1. : to cast off (feathers) : molt

2. obsolete : to bring about a change in (as color or coat) : shed

3.

a. : to get rid of (the horns) : cast — used of a stag

b. : to shed the horns from (the head)

intransitive verb

1. : to cast the feathers : molt

2. : to shed or cast horns

VII.

dialect Britain

variant of mow

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.