MOTE


Meaning of MOTE in English

I. ˈmōt verbal auxiliary

( past moste ˈmōst)

Etymology: Middle English moten, from Old English mōtan to be allowed to, be able to, have to — more at must

archaic : may , might

II. ˈmōt, usu -ōd.+V noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English mot, moot, from Old English mot; akin to Middle Dutch & Frisian mot earth, sand, Norwegian mutt speck

1.

a. : a small particle (as of floating dust) : speck

motes danced in the shafts of sunlight — Margaret Kennedy

b. archaic : a bit of foreign matter in food or drink

c. obsolete : something extremely minute : trifle , jot , tittle

2. dialect Britain : straw , stalk

3.

a. : a small undeveloped seed or fragment that has not been removed in cotton ginning

b. : a black spot in yarn or cloth due to such an impurity

- mote in the eye

III. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

: to remove motes from (cotton)

IV. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Old French mote, motte mound, hillock, mote — more at motte

1. or mote hill : height , hill ; especially : an elevated place used as a fortification

2. : barrow , tumulus

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