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meta
1[met-uh]
adjective
pertaining to or noting a story, conversation, character, etc., that consciously references or comments upon its own subject or features, often in the form of parody.
A movie about making a movie is just so meta—especially when the actors criticize the acting.
pertaining to or noting an abstract, high-level analysis or commentary, especially one that consciously references something of its own type.
noun
a consciously and playfully self-referential story, conversation, etc..
That dialogue was an example of meta at its best.
an abstract, high-level analysis or commentary.
writing a meta to explain the character’s motivation.
verb (used without object)
to analyze or comment on something in a meta way.
I spend more time metaing about the show than actually watching it.
meta
2[mee-tuh]
noun
plural
metae(in ancient Rome) a column or post, or a group of columns or posts, placed at each end of a racetrack to mark the turning places.
meta
3[met-uh]
adjective
pertaining to or occupying two positions (1, 3) in the benzene ring that are separated by one carbon atom.
meta
4[met-uh]
noun
a shortened form of metamour.
Meta
5[mee-tuh]
noun
a female given name.
meta-
6a prefix appearing in loanwords from Greek, with the meanings “after,” “along with,” “beyond,” “among,” “behind,” and productive in English on the Greek model.
metacarpus; metagenesis.
a prefix added to the name of a subject and designating another subject that analyzes the original one but at a more abstract, higher level.
metaphilosophy; metalinguistics.
a prefix added to the name of something that consciously references or comments upon its own subject or features.
a meta-painting of an artist painting a canvas.
Chemistry.
(of acids, salts, or their organic derivatives) a prefix denoting the least hydrated of a series.
meta-antimonic, HSbO3;
meta-antimonous, HSbO2.
a prefix designating the meta position in the benzene ring. m-.
meta-
1prefix
indicating change, alteration, or alternation
metabolism
metamorphosis
(of an academic discipline, esp philosophy) concerned with the concepts and results of the named discipline See also metatheory
metamathematics
meta-ethics
occurring or situated behind or after
metaphase
m-. (often in italics) denoting that an organic compound contains a benzene ring with substituents in the 1,3-positions Compare ortho- para- 1
metadinitrobenzene
meta-cresol
denoting an isomer, polymer, or compound related to a specified compound (often differing from similar compounds that are prefixed by para- )
metaldehyde
denoting an oxyacid that is a lower hydrated form of the anhydride or a salt of such an acid Compare ortho-
metaphosphoric acid
Meta
2/ ˈmeɪtə, ˈmeta /
noun
a river in Colombia, rising in the Andes and flowing northeast and east, forming part of the border between Colombia and Venezuela, to join the Orinoco River. Length: about 1000 km (620 miles)
Word History and Origins
Origin of meta-1
Origin of meta-2
Origin of meta-4
Origin of meta-5
Word History and Origins
Origin of meta-1
Example Sentences
WhatsApp - whose owner, Meta, is designated an extremist organisation in Russia - is especially popular with older people because of how easy it is to register and use.
Meta and OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, have also been sued over alleged copyright infringement.
In June, a judge dismissed a lawsuit authors filed against Facebook parent company Meta, which also developed an AI assistant, alleging that the company stole their work to train its AI systems.
District Judge Vince Chhabria noted that the lawsuit was tossed because the plaintiffs “made the wrong arguments,” but the ruling didn’t “stand for the proposition that Meta’s use of copyrighted materials to train its language models is lawful.”
For months, Meta’s algorithm badgered me to buy a little piece of plastic mounted on a magnet.
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When To Use
Meta is when something refers back to or is about itself, like a book about books or a meme about memes.
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