Associations to the word «Mere»
Noun
- Nuisance
- Copying
- Dread
- Outlaw
- Habit
- Instinct
- Harlem
- Necessary
- Stupidity
- Sake
- Grandeur
- Rhetoric
- Sensibility
- Splendour
- Appetite
- Greatness
- Vestige
- Mankind
- Boredom
- Contrary
- Sympathy
- Charm
- Personage
- Whisper
- Allegory
- Brother
- Vocabulary
- Skirmish
- Possessor
- Subsistence
- Genius
- Ambition
- Scorn
- Meadow
- Freshness
- Pomp
- Worshipper
- Novelty
- Outline
- Hearer
- Elegance
- Ous
- Conformity
- Gran
- Notion
- Regard
- Shred
- Essence
- Metaphor
- Vale
- Apprehension
- Greed
- Reproach
- Allusion
- Delight
- Sensation
- Reality
- Admiration
- Quotation
- Jealousy
- Glimmer
- Aye
- Benevolence
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
MERE, noun. (obsolete) the sea
MERE, noun. (dialectal or literary) a pool; a small lake or pond; marsh
MERE, noun. Boundary, limit; a boundary-marker; boundary-line
MERE, verb. (transitive) (obsolete) To limit; bound; divide or cause division in.
MERE, verb. (intransitive) (obsolete) To set divisions and bounds.
MERE, adjective. (obsolete) famous.
MERE, adjective. (obsolete) Pure, unalloyed [8th-17thc.].
MERE, adjective. (obsolete) Nothing less than; complete, downright [15th-18thc.].
MERE, adjective. Just, only; no more than [from 16thc.], pure and simple, neither more nor better than might be expected.
MERE, noun. A Maori war-club
MERE MORTAL, noun. One who is not a god; a human being.
MERE MORTAL, noun. (idiomatic) An ordinary person; Someone without special abilities or status.
MERE MORTALS, noun. Plural of mere mortal
Dictionary definition
MERE, noun. A small pond of standing water.
MERE, adjective. Being nothing more than specified; "a mere child".
MERE, adjective. Apart from anything else; without additions or modifications; "only the bare facts"; "shocked by the mere idea"; "the simple passage of time was enough"; "the simple truth".
Wise words
Every creature is a word of God.