mery
English
Adjective
mery
- Obsolete form of merry.
- 1526, John Rastell, edited by Hermann Oesterley, A Hundred Mery Talys: From the Only Perfect Copy Known (published 1866), page 57:
- A Yonge gentylman of the age of .xx. yere some whate dysposyd to myrth and game on a tyme talkyd with a gentylwoman which was ryght wyfe and also mery.
- 1533, R. Saltwood, A comparyson bytwene. iiij. byrdes, the larke, the nyghtyngale, ye thrusshe [and] the cuko, for theyr syngynge who shuld be chauntoure of the quere:
- As plesaunt to the ere as the blacke sanctus Of a sad sorte vpon a mery pyn.
- 1581, William Sandys, Christmastide: Its History, Festivities, and Carols (published 2020):
- At Christmas be mery, and thanke god of alll And feast thy pore neighbours, the great with the small.
- 1596, Hugh Latimer, Frutefull Sermons, page 52:
- There was a mery Monke in Cambridge in the college that I was in, and it chanced a great company of us to be together, intending to make good cheare, to be mery (as scholers wd by mery when they are disposed:)
Middle English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Inherited from Old English meriġe, miriġe, myriġe, myreġe, myrġe, from Proto-West Germanic *murgī, from Proto-Germanic *murguz, from Proto-Indo-European *mréǵʰus. Doublet of bref.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmɛriː(ə)/, /ˈmiriː(ə)/, /ˈmuriː(ə)/
Adjective
mery (comparative meriere, superlative meriest)
- Happy, joyful, pleased; in a good mood or state of mind:
- Tending to be happy; jovial, merry, good-natured, blissful.
- Creating or pertaining to happiness; nice, good, delightful.
- (of a time or place) Happy, nice, good, bounteous.
- (of speech or sound) Useful, entertaining, appealing.
- Attractive, good-looking; pleasing to one's eyes.
- Having a good, nice or pleasing scent or smell.
- Powerful, mighty, tough; having much strength.
- (rare) Full of humor (due to drink).
- (rare) Active, fast, vigorous.
- (rare) Intelligent, smart, learned.
References
- “mirī(e, adj.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-11-09.
Adverb
mery
- Merrily, gladly, jovially; in a happy or merry way.
- Pleasingly, delightfully; in a way causing happiness.
- (rare) Attractively, nicely.
- (rare) Without strength or harshness.
References
- “mirī(e, adv.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-11-09.
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