Mister vs Miter - What's the difference?
mister | miter |
Title conferred on an adult male, usually when the name is unknown. Also (often parent to young child) referring to a man whose name is unknown.
* 1855 , George Musalas Colvocoresses, Four Years in the Government Exploring Expedition , J. M. Fairchild & co., page 358:
* 1908 , Jack Brand, By Wild Waves Tossed: An Ocean Love Story , The McClure Company, page 90:
(obsolete) Someone's business or function; an occupation, employment, trade.
A kind, type of.
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , I.ix:
(obsolete) Need (of something).
* :
(obsolete) Necessity; the necessary time.
* :
(obsolete, impersonal) To be necessary; to matter.
* 1590 , Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene , III.vii:
A device that makes or sprays mist.
As nouns the difference between mister and miter
is that mister is mister (title conferred on an adult male), especially when referring to anglophones while miter is womb, uterus.mister
English
Etymology 1
Unaccented variant ofNoun
(en noun)- You may sit here, mister .
- Go and ask that mister if you can get your ball out of his garden.
- Fine day to see sights, gentlemen. Well, misters , here's the railing round the ground, and there's the paling round the tomb, eight feet deep, six feet long, and three feet wide.
- There's only three misters aboard this ship, or, rather, there's only two.
Coordinate terms
* (title of adult male) master, mistress, , DoctorEtymology 2
From (etyl) mester, (meister) (et al.), from (etyl) misterium, a medieval conflation of (etyl) .David Wallace,Chaucerian polity: absolutist lineages and associational forms in England and Italy, Stanford University Press, 1997
Noun
(en noun)- The Redcrosse knight toward him crossed fast, / To weet, what mister wight was so dismayd.
- And thenne the grene knyghte kneled doune / and dyd hym homage with his swerd / thenne said the damoisel me repenteth grene knyghte of your dommage / and of youre broders dethe the black knyghte / for of your helpe I had grete myster / For I drede me sore to passe this forest / Nay drede you not sayd the grene knyghte / for ye shal lodge with me this nyghte / and to morne I shalle helpe you thorou this forest
- It was by Merlyns auyse said the knyghte / As for hym sayd kynge Carados / I wylle encountre with kynge bors / and ye wil rescowe me whan myster is / go on said they al / we wil do all that we may
Verb
(en verb)- As for my name, it mistreth not to tell; / Call me the Squyre of Dames that me beseemeth well.
Etymology 3
.Noun
(en noun)- Odessa D. uses a mister Sunday to fight the 106-degree heat at a NASCAR race in Fontana, California.