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meanmore about mean

mean


  6  definitions  found 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Mean  \Mean\,  a.  [Compar.  {Meaner};  superl.  {Meanest}.]  [OE. 
  mene,  AS  m?ne  wicked;  akin  to  m[=a]n,  a.,  wicked,  n., 
  wickedness,  OS  m?n  wickedness,  OHG.  mein,  G.  meineid 
  perjury,  Icel.  mein  harm,  hurt,  and  perh.  to  AS  gem?ne 
  common,  general,  D.  gemeen  G.  gemein  Goth.  gam['a]ins,  and 
  L.  communis.  The  AS  gem?ne  prob.  influenced  the  meaning.] 
  1.  Destitute  of  distinction  or  eminence;  common;  low  vulgar; 
  humble.  ``Of  mean  parentage.''  --Sir  P.  Sidney. 
 
  The  mean  man  boweth  down  and  the  great  man  humbleth 
  himself.  --Is.  ii  9. 
 
  2.  Wanting  dignity  of  mind;  low-minded;  base;  destitute  of 
  honor;  spiritless;  as  a  mean  motive. 
 
  Can  you  imagine  I  so  mean  could  prove,  To  save  my 
  life  by  changing  of  my  love  ?  --Dryden. 
 
  3.  Of  little  value  or  account;  worthy  of  little  or  no  regard; 
  contemptible;  despicable. 
 
  The  Roman  legions  and  great  C[ae]sar  found  Our 
  fathers  no  mean  foes.  --J.  Philips. 
 
  4.  Of  poor  quality;  as  mean  fare. 
 
  5.  Penurious;  stingy;  close-fisted;  illiberal;  as  mean 
  hospitality. 
 
  Note:  Mean  is  sometimes  used  in  the  formation  of  compounds, 
  the  sense  of  which  is  obvious  without  explanation;  as 
  meanborn  mean-looking,  etc 
 
  Syn:  Base;  ignoble;  abject;  beggarly;  wretched;  degraded; 
  degenerate;  vulgar;  vile;  servile;  menial;  spiritless; 
  groveling;  slavish;  dishonorable;  disgraceful;  shameful; 
  despicable;  contemptible;  paltry;  sordid.  See  {Base}. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Mean  \Mean\,  v.  t.  [imp.  &  p.  p.  {Meant};  p.  pr  &  vb  n. 
  {Meaning}.]  [OE.  menen,  AS  m[=ae]nan  to  recite,  tell 
  intend,  wish;  akin  to  OS  m[=e]nian  to  have  in  mind,  mean  D. 
  meenen,  G.  meinen,  OHG.  meinan,  Icel.  meina,  Sw  mena,  Dan. 
  mene,  and  to  E.  mind.  ?.  See  {Mind},  and  cf  {Moan}.] 
  1.  To  have  in  the  mind,  as  a  purpose,  intention,  etc.;  to 
  intend;  to  purpose;  to  design;  as  what  do  you  mean  to  do 
  ? 
 
  What  mean  ye  by  this  service  ?  --Ex.  xii.  26. 
 
  Ye  thought  evil  against  me  but  God  meant  it  unto 
  good.  --Gen.  1.  20. 
 
  I  am  not  a  Spaniard  To  say  that  it  is  yours  and  not 
  to  mean  it  --Longfellow. 
 
  2.  To  signify;  to  indicate;  to  import;  to  denote. 
 
  What  mean  these  seven  ewe  lambs  ?  --Gen.  xxi. 
  29. 
 
  Go  ye  and  learn  what  that  me?neth.  --Matt.  ix 
  13. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Mean  \Mean\,  v.  i. 
  To  have  a  purpose  or  intention.  [Rare,  except  in  the  phrase 
  to  mean  well  or  ill.]  --Shak. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Mean  \Mean\,  a.  [OE.  mene,  OF  meiien  F.  moyen,  fr  L.  medianus 
  that  is  in  the  middle,  fr  medius;  akin  to  E.  mid.  See 
  {Mid}.] 
  1.  Occupying  a  middle  position;  middle;  being  about  midway 
  between  extremes. 
 
  Being  of  middle  age  and  a  mean  stature.  --Sir.  P. 
  Sidney. 
 
  2.  Intermediate  in  excellence  of  any  kind 
 
  According  to  the  fittest  style  of  lofty,  mean  or 
  lowly.  --Milton. 
 
  3.  (Math.)  Average;  having  an  intermediate  value  between  two 
  extremes,  or  between  the  several  successive  values  of  a 
  variable  quantity  during  one  cycle  of  variation;  as  mean 
  distance;  mean  motion;  mean  solar  day 
 
  {Mean  distance}  (of  a  planet  from  the  sun)  (Astron.),  the 
  average  of  the  distances  throughout  one  revolution  of  the 
  planet,  equivalent  to  the  semi-major  axis  of  the  orbit. 
 
  {Mean  error}  (Math.  Phys.),  the  average  error  of  a  number  of 
  observations  found  by  taking  the  mean  value  of  the 
  positive  and  negative  errors  without  regard  to  sign. 
 
  {Mean-square  error},  or  {Error  of  the  mean  square}  (Math. 
  Phys.),  the  error  the  square  of  which  is  the  mean  of  the 
  squares  of  all  the  errors;  --  called  also  especially  by 
  European  writers,  {mean  error}. 
 
  {Mean  line}.  (Crystallog.)  Same  as  {Bisectrix}. 
 
  {Mean  noon},  noon  as  determined  by  mean  time. 
 
  {Mean  proportional}  (between  two  numbers)  (Math.),  the  square 
  root  of  their  product. 
 
  {Mean  sun},  a  fictitious  sun  supposed  to  move  uniformly  in 
  the  equator  so  as  to  be  on  the  meridian  each  day  at  mean 
  noon. 
 
  {Mean  time},  time  as  measured  by  an  equable  motion,  as  of  a 
  perfect  clock,  or  as  reckoned  on  the  supposition  that  all 
  the  days  of  the  year  are  of  a  mean  or  uniform  length,  in 
  contradistinction  from  apparent  time,  or  that  actually 
  indicated  by  the  sun,  and  from  sidereal  time,  or  that 
  measured  by  the  stars. 
 
  From  Webster's  Revised  Unabridged  Dictionary  (1913)  [web1913]: 
 
  Mean  \Mean\,  n. 
  1.  That  which  is  mean  or  intermediate,  between  two  extremes 
  of  place  time,  or  number;  the  middle  point  or  place 
  middle  rate  or  degree;  mediocrity;  medium;  absence  of 
  extremes  or  excess;  moderation;  measure. 
 
  But  to  speak  in  a  mean  the  virtue  of  prosperity  is 
  temperance;  the  virtue  of  adversity  is  fortitude. 
  --Bacon. 
 
  There  is  a  mean  in  all  things  --Dryden. 
 
  The  extremes  we  have  mentioned,  between  which  the 
  wellinstracted  Christian  holds  the  mean  are 
  correlatives.  --I.  Taylor. 
 
  2.  (Math.)  A  quantity  having  an  intermediate  value  between 
  several  others  from  which  it  is  derived,  and  of  which  it 
  expresses  the  resultant  value;  usually,  unless  otherwise 
  specified,  it  is  the  simple  average,  formed  by  adding  the 
  quantities  together  and  dividing  by  their  number,  which  is 
  called  an  arithmetical  mean  A  geometrical  mean  is  the 
  square  root  of  the  product  of  the  quantities. 
 
  3.  That  through  which  or  by  the  help  of  which  an  end  is 
  attained;  something  tending  to  an  object  desired; 
  intermediate  agency  or  measure;  necessary  condition  or 
  coagent;  instrument. 
 
  Their  virtuous  conversation  was  a  mean  to  work  the 
  conversion  of  the  heathen  to  Christ.  --Hooker. 
 
  You  may  be  able,  by  this  mean  to  review  your  own 
  scientific  acquirements.  --Coleridge. 
 
  Philosophical  doubt  is  not  an  end  but  a  mean  --Sir 
  W.  Hamilton. 
 
  Note:  In  this  sense  the  word  is  usually  employed  in  the 
  plural  form  means  and  often  with  a  singular  attribute 
  or  predicate,  as  if  a  singular  noun 
 
  By  this  means  he  had  them  more  at  vantage. 
  --Bacon. 
 
  What  other  means  is  left  unto  us  --Shak. 
 
  4.  pl  Hence:  Resources;  property,  revenue,  or  the  like 
  considered  as  the  condition  of  easy  livelihood,  or  an 
  instrumentality  at  command  for  effecting  any  purpose; 
  disposable  force  or  substance. 
 
  Your  means  are  very  slender,  and  your  waste  is 
  great.  --Shak. 
 
  5.  (Mus.)  A  part  whether  alto  or  tenor,  intermediate  between 
  the  soprano  and  base;  a  middle  part  [Obs.] 
 
  The  mean  is  drowned  with  your  unruly  base.  --Shak. 
 
  6.  Meantime;  meanwhile.  [Obs.]  --Spenser. 
 
  7.  A  mediator;  a  go-between.  [Obs.]  --Piers  Plowman. 
 
  He  wooeth  her  by  means  and  by  brokage.  --Chaucer. 
 
  {By  all  means},  certainly;  without  fail  as  go  by  all 
  means 
 
  {By  any  means},  in  any  way  possibly;  at  all 
 
  If  by  any  means  I  might  attain  to  the  resurrection 
  of  the  dead.  --Phil.  iii. 
  ll 
 
 
  {By  no  means},  or  {By  no  manner  of  means},  not  at  all 
  certainly  not  not  in  any  degree. 
 
  The  wine  on  this  side  of  the  lake  is  by  no  means  so 
  good  as  that  on  the  other  --Addison. 
 
  From  WordNet  r  1.6  [wn]: 
 
  mean 
  adj  1:  (statistics)  approximating  the  statistical  norm  or  average 
  or  expected  value;  "the  average  income  in  New  England 
  is  below  that  of  the  nation";  "of  average  height  for 
  his  age";  "the  mean  annual  rainfall"  [syn:  {average}, 
  {mean(a)}] 
  2:  characterized  by  malice;  "a  hateful  thing  to  do";  "in  a  mean 
  mood";  "told  spiteful  stories  about  the  fat  lady"  [syn:  {hateful}, 
  {spiteful}] 
  3:  having  or  showing  a  meanspirited  lack  of  honor  or  morality; 
  "that  liberal  obedience  without  which  your  army  would  be  a 
  base  rabble"-  Edmund  Burke;  "taking  a  mean  advantage"; 
  "chok'd  with  ambition  of  the  meaner  sort"-  Shakespeare; 
  "something  essentially  vulgar  and  meanspirited  in 
  politics"  [syn:  {base},  {meanspirited}] 
  4:  (slang)  excellent;  "famous  for  a  mean  backhand" 
  5:  marked  by  poverty  befitting  a  beggar;  "a  beggarly  existence 
  in  the  slums";  "a  mean  hut"  [syn:  {beggarly}] 
  6:  used  of  persons  or  behavior;  characterized  by  or  indicative 
  of  lack  of  generosity;  "a  small  miserly  man"  [syn:  {mingy}, 
  {miserly},  {little},  {small},  {tight}] 
  7:  used  of  sums  of  money;  so  small  in  amount  as  to  deserve 
  contempt  [syn:  {beggarly}] 
  n  :  an  average  of  n  numbers  computed  by  adding  some  function  of 
  the  numbers  and  dividing  by  some  function  of  n 
  v  1:  mean  or  intend  to  express  or  convey;  "You  never  understand 
  what  I  mean!"  "what  do  his  words  intend?"  [syn:  {intend}] 
  2:  have  as  a  logical  consequence;  "The  water  shortage  means 
  that  we  have  to  stop  taking  long  showers"  [syn:  {entail}, 
  {imply}] 
  3:  denote  or  connote;  "`maison'  means  `house'  in  French";  "An 
  example  sentence  would  show  what  this  word  means"  [syn:  {intend}, 
  {signify},  {stand  for}] 
  4:  have  in  mind  as  a  purpose;  "I  mean  no  harm";  "I  only  meant 
  to  help  you";  "She  didn't  think  to  harm  me";  "We  thought 
  to  return  early  that  night"  [syn:  {intend},  {think}] 
  5:  have  a  specified  degree  of  importance;  "My  ex-husband  means 
  nothing  to  me";  "Happiness  means  everything" 
  6:  "I'm  thinking  of  good  food  when  I  talk  about  France";  "Yes, 
  I  meant  you  when  I  complained  about  people  who  gossip!" 
  [syn:  {think  of},  {have  in  mind}] 
  7:  destine  or  designate  for  a  certain  purpose;  "These  flowers 
  were  meant  for  you" 




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