Geta vs Meta - What's the difference?
geta | meta |
A Japanese raised wooden clog, worn with traditional Japanese garments such as the kimono.
* 1982' July, Robert Dillon, '''''Geta As A Karate Training Tool'', '' ,
(informal) Self-referential; at a higher level
* {{quote-book, 2002, Robert C. Neville, Religion in Late Modernity
, passage=
* {{quote-book, 2006, Brendan Vaughan, What Would MacGyver Do?
, passage=Besides, I can just hear Vaughan: "Very funny, Stacey, very Charlie Kaufman-esque, very meta , very '97. I can't use it." }}
As nouns the difference between geta and meta
is that geta is a Japanese raised wooden clog, worn with traditional Japanese garments such as the kimono while meta is boundary marker.As an adjective meta is
self-referential; at a higher level.geta
English
Noun
(geta)page 70,
- The Japanese geta''''' or wooden sandal is a superb, though little-utilized, tool for training in the martial arts.The ' geta are flat, wooden sandals raised on vertical slats.
See also
* zoriAnagrams
* * ----meta
English
Adjective
(en adjective)citation
citation