1. Se dit, dans les versifications grecque et latine d'une unité rythmique formée de syllabes longues ou brèves comprenant deux temps marqués.
2. Unité de longueur plus ou moins utilisée en France depuis 1790 dont la définition était ŕ l'origine la dix millionième partie du quart du méridien terrestre.
3. Cette longueur est aujourd'hui définie par rapport ŕ la longueur d'onde d'un rayonnement donné.
4. En poésie française : les syllabes d'un mot forment un mètre.
Si unit (symbol m) of length, equivalent to 1.093 yards or 39.37 inches. It is defined by scientists as the length of the path traveled by light in a vacuum during a time interval of 1/299,792,458 of a second.
In poetry, the recurring pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables in a line of verse. The unit of meter is a foot. Meter is classified by the number of feet to a line: a minimum of two and a maximum of eight. A line of two feet is a dimeter. They are then named, in order, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, and octameter.Any instrument used for measurement. The term is often compounded with a prefix to denote a specific type of meter: for example, ammeter, voltmeter, flowmeter, or pedometer.(Alternate spelling: metre).
1. The basic unit of length adopted under the System International d'Unites (approximately 1.094 yards); SYN. metre, m.
2. Rhythm as given by division into parts of equal time; SYN. time.
3. (Prosody) The accent in a metrical foot of verse; SYN. measure, beat, cadence.
4. Any of various instruments for measuring a quantity.
Alternate (chiefly British) spelling for meter.
1. A measure or standard used for comparison.
2. A three-foot-long measuring stick or tape etc; SYN. yard measure.
Mesure d'un terrain.