the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made.
physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, especially as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like.
something that occupies space.
a particular kind of substance: coloring matter.
a situation, state, affair, or business: a trivial matter.
an amount or extent reckoned approximately: a matter of 10 miles.
something of consequence: matter for serious thought.
importance or significance: decisions of little matter.
difficulty; problem; trouble: Whatever is the matter?There is something the matter with the car.
ground, reason, or cause: a matter for complaint.
the material or substance of a discourse, book, etc., often as distinguished from its form.
things put down in words, especially printed: reading matter.
things sent by mail: postal matter.
a substance discharged by a living body, especially pus.
Philosophy.
that which by integrative organization forms chemical substances and living things.
Aristotelianism.that which relates to form as potentiality does to actuality.
Law. statement or allegation.
Printing.
material for work; copy.
type set up.
Christian Science. the concept of substance shaped by the limitations of the human mind.
verb (used without object)
to be of importance; signify: It matters little.
Pathology. to suppurate.
Idioms for matter
a matter of life and death, something of vital or crucial importance.
as a matter of fact, in reality; actually; in fact: As a matter of fact, there is no substance to that rumor.
for that matter, as far as that is concerned; as for that: For that matter, you are no better qualified to judge than I.Also for the matter of that .
no matter,
regardless or irrespective of: We'll never finish on time, no matter how hard we work.
it is unimportant; it makes no difference: No matter, this string will do as well as any other.
Origin of matter
First recorded in 1175–1225; Middle English mater(e), materie, from Anglo-French, Old French mat(i)ere, materie, from Latin māteria “woody part of a tree, material, substance,” derivative of māter “mother”; see also mother1
SYNONYMS FOR matter
5 thing, concern.
8 moment.
11 content, subject, topic.
19 count.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR matter ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for matter
1. Matter,material,stuff,substance refer to that of which physical objects are composed (though all these terms are also used abstractly). Matter, as distinct from mind and spirit, is a broad word that applies to anything perceived, or known to be occupying space: solid matter; gaseous matter.Material usually means some definite kind, quality, or quantity of matter, especially as intended for use: woolen material; a house built of good materials.Stuff, a less technical word, with approximately the same meanings as material, is characterized by being on an informal level when it refers to physical objects ( Dynamite is queer stuff ), and on a literary or poetic one when it is used abstractly ( the stuff that dreams are made on ). Substance is the matter that composes a thing, thought of in relation to its essential properties: a sticky substance.
historical usage of matter
Matter has a spectacular history. The English noun ultimately comes from Latin māteria (also māteriēs ) “timber, wood for building, the woody part of a tree (as opposed to the root or bark).” Māteria is a derivative of māter “mother, source, origin of (material and abstract) things.” In the first century b.c., the Roman poet and Epicurean philosopher Lucretius and his elder contemporary Cicero, statesman and man of letters, began using māteria in the sense “any substance that makes up a physical object,” also “the basic substance of the physical universe,” a translation of Greek hýlē “timber, firewood, wood for building.” Two hundred years earlier, Aristotle was using hýlē in the extended sense “the basic substance of the physical universe, matter,” prefiguring the Romans. Māteria maintained its original, pre-Aristotelian sense “wood” in Portuguese, becoming madeira by regular phonetic change. The island of Madeira is so called because it is (or was) thickly wooded, and the fortified wine originating on that island is known as Madeira or Madeira wine (first occurring in English at the end of the 16th century). Some would claim that, more than wood, wine is the basic substance, or stuff, of life.
There’s also the ever-present matter of how long it takes a test such as the LabCorp one to come back.
Even the most cautious schools are seeing outbreaks|Sy Mukherjee|September 17, 2020|Fortune
They described the changes as addressing national security concerns about the transaction and asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.
Oracle, Bytedance, and U.S. Treasury tentatively agree on terms for TikTok bid|radmarya|September 17, 2020|Fortune
Then there is the not-small matter of whether Facebook can actually enforce the rules it comes up with.
Facebook tries to clean up Groups with new policies|Sarah Perez|September 17, 2020|TechCrunch
Leo Kadanoff, a condensed matter researcher, figured out how to do so in 1966.
How Mathematical ‘Hocus-Pocus’ Saved Particle Physics|Charlie Wood|September 17, 2020|Quanta Magazine
Byrne notes that lots of proposals over the years have called for dropping something into the atmosphere itself to look for more biosignatures or even organic matter.
We need to go to Venus as soon as possible|Neel Patel|September 16, 2020|MIT Technology Review
To borrow an old right-wing talking point, these people are angry no matter what we do.
Harry Shearer on The Dangerous Business of Satire|Lloyd Grove|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
The end of conventional childbirth might only be a matter of time.
Men Will Someday Have Kids Without Women|Samantha Allen|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
In the absence of cultural shifts, then, new reproductive technology might not matter as much for women as it would for men.
Men Will Someday Have Kids Without Women|Samantha Allen|January 3, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Before we get to all that, permit me a brief reflection on this matter of Steve Scalise.
Steve Scalise and the Right’s Ridiculous Racial Blame Game|Michael Tomasky|January 2, 2015|DAILY BEAST
Nixon said defending the two islands was “a matter of principle.”
The World’s Toughest Political Quiz|Jeff Greenfield|December 31, 2014|DAILY BEAST
And seeing they did not attempt to run away, they made no matter of it, if they stayed two or three days one with the other.
An Historical Relation Of The Island Ceylon In The East Indies|Robert Knox
Sometimes the victim and the victimizer meet, the money demanded is paid over, and there the matter ends.
Danger! A True History of a Great City's Wiles and Temptations|William Howe
There came into her heart a longing that Ludwell Cary should see the matter truly.
Lewis Rand|Mary Johnston
And even if the Germans did conquer Russia, what did it matter?
The Story of the Great War, Volume VI (of VIII)|Various
He had been twice married; his second union, with his niece Martina, was frequently made a matter of reproach to him.
Something that has mass. Most of the matter in the universe is composed of atoms which are themselves composed of subatomic particles. See also energystate of matter.