meth
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /mɛθ/
Audio (Southern England) (file) Audio (AU) (file) - Rhymes: -ɛθ
Etymology 1
Clipping of methamphetamine.
Noun
meth (countable and uncountable, plural meths)
- (informal) Methamphetamine, especially in the form of the crystalline hydrochloride.
Derived terms
Translations
See also
Etymology 2
Clipping of methadone.
Noun
meth (countable and uncountable, plural meths)
- (informal) Methadone.
- 1998 November 14, Markus, “Re: METH”, in alt.recovery (Usenet):
- Dunno why you want to try and make last any longer than it already does. Meth has to be the single most wicked shit I ever involved myself with. But as far as what it actually does, your best bet would be to trot down to the local library and look it up.
Etymology 3
From meths or methylated spirits, as stereotypically drunk by tramps.
See also
Etymology 4
From metheglin, from Welsh meddyglyn, from meddyg (“medicinal”) (from Latin medicus) + llyn (“liquor”) (cognate with Irish lionn and Gaelic leann).
Noun
meth (countable and uncountable, plural meths)
- A spiced mead, originally from Wales.
- 1678, John Worlidge, Vinetum Britannicum, or a Treatise of Cider, 3rd edit.:
- The Russians, Swedes, Danes, and those of Northern Inhabitants, exceed all the rest, having made the drinking of Brandy, Aqua Vitae, Hydromel, Beer, Mum, Meth, and other Liquors in great quantitites, so familiar to them, that they usually drink our countrymen to death.
Etymology 5
Clipping of method, which see.
Cornish
Etymology 1
From Proto-Celtic *metom, possibly borrowed from a non-Indo-European substrate.
Etymology 2
From Proto-Celtic *maketi (“to raise”), from Proto-Indo-European *meh₂ḱ- (“long, to raise”).
Middle English
Turkish
Etymology
From Ottoman Turkish مدح (medh), from Arabic مَدْح (madḥ).
Derived terms
- methetmek (“to praise”)
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