Associations to the word «Mot»
Noun
- Bon
- Bot
- Les
- Amour
- Une
- Och
- Qu
- Det
- Som
- Je
- Vizier
- Que
- Mai
- Av
- Om
- Til
- Sans
- Alla
- Des
- Nom
- Nord
- Jul
- Og
- Ce
- Le
- Elle
- Underworld
- Monde
- Hem
- Encore
- Ne
- Yam
- Sou
- Aux
- Executioner
- Sur
- Tout
- Ley
- Wit
- Grenadier
- Bugle
- Se
- Un
- Ives
- Anecdote
- En
- Tit
- Motif
- Med
- Wil
- Dan
- Duet
- Cul
- Disguise
- Caliph
- Trois
- Synth
- Ion
- Hasan
- Cannibal
- Homme
- Fra
- Ut
- Hua
- Sig
- Ami
- Pa
- Ai
- Hire
- Mun
- Prohibition
- Chose
- Motivation
- Revue
- Au
- Alta
- Emile
- Ful
- Femme
- Hazard
- Adultery
- Pr
- Pol
- Garage
- Parole
- Ba
- Jest
Wiktionary
MOT, noun. A witty remark; a witticism; a bon mot.
MOT, noun. (obsolete) A word or a motto; a device.
MOT, noun. (obsolete) A note or brief strain on a bugle.
MOT, noun. (slang) (Irish English) A girl, woman or girlfriend, particularly in the Dublin area.
MOT, proper noun. Canaanite god of death and the underworld.
MOT, noun. (British) Ministry of Transport test; an annual test of roadworthiness for British cars over three years old.
MOT, noun. (business) management of technology.
MOT, noun. (electronics) microwave oven transformer
MOT, noun. A member of the tribe; i.e. a Jew
MOT JUSTE, noun. The perfectly appropriate word or phrase for the situation.
Dictionary definition
MOT, noun. A clever remark.
MOT, noun. A compulsory annual test of older motor vehicles for safety and exhaust fumes.
Wise words
Life has no meaning unless one lives it with a will, at
least to the limit of one's will. Virtue, good, evil are
nothing but words, unless one takes them apart in order to
build something with them; they do not win their true
meaning until one knows how to apply them.