| 释义 | me·ter I. \ˈmēd.ə(r), -ētə-\ noun
 (-s)
 Usage: see -er
 Etymology: Middle English meter, metre, from Old English & Middle French; Old English mēter, from Latin metrum, from Greek metron meter, measure; Middle French metre, from Old French, from Latin metrum — more at measure
 1.
 a.  : systematically arranged and measured rhythm in verse
 < the only strict antithesis to prose is meter — William Wordsworth >
 (1)  : rhythm that continuously repeats a single basic pattern or rhythmic system
 < iambic meter >
 < dactylic meter >
 — compare cadence
 (2)  : rhythm characterized by the regular recurrence of a systematic arrangement of such basic patterns or systems into larger figures
 < a verse with sapphic meter >
 b.  : a measure or unit of metrical verse : metron — usually used in combination
 < dimeter >
 < pentameter >
 — compare foot
 c.  : a fixed metrical pattern : verse form
 < the heroic couplet was a favorite meter of the neoclassic poets >
 d. archaic  : a metrical composition : verse
 < a pebble of the brook warbled out these meters meet — William Blake >
 e.  : rhythm in verse
 2.
 a.  : the part of rhythmical structure concerned with the division of a musical composition into measures by means of regularly recurring accents with each measure consisting of a uniform number of beats or time units the first of which has the strongest accent
 b.  : the distribution of long and short notes or tones within measures : time
 Synonyms: see rhythm
 II. verb
 (metered ; metered ; metering \-əriŋ also ˈmē.triŋ\ ; meters)
 Usage: see -er
 Etymology: Middle English metren, from metre, meter, n.
 intransitive verb
 : to engage in poetic composition : versify
 transitive verb
 1.  : to put into meter : give metrical form to
 2.  : to analyze metrically : scan
 < expansion of the liquid after it is metered — E.E.Reed >
 III. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English, from meten to mete, measure + -er — more at mete
 : one that measures; especially  : an official measurer of commodities
 IV. noun
 (-s)
 Usage: see -er
 Etymology: French mètre, from Greek metron measure
 : the basic metric unit of length that is equal to the distance between two lines on a platinum-iridium bar kept at the International Bureau of Weights and Measures near Paris, is approximately equal to 39.37 inches, and is equal to 1,650,763.73 wavelengths of the orange-red light of excited krypton of mass number 86 — see metric system table
 V. noun
 (-s)
 Usage: often attributive
 Etymology: -meter
 1.
 a.  : an instrument for measuring and recording the amount of something (as water, gas, electricity) as it flows
 b.  : a device (as a valve in a carburetor) that regulates the flow of a fluid
 2.
 a.  : an instrument for measuring and usually recording distance, time, weight, speed, or intensity
 b.  : an instrument for measuring and recording the amount of a commodity or service consumed: as
 (1)  : parking meter
 (2)  : postage meter
 3.
 a.  : the impression made by a postage meter on a piece of mail
 b.  : a philatelic cover bearing such an impression
 VI. verb
 (metered ; metered ; metering \-əriŋ also ˈmē.triŋ\ ; meters)
 transitive verb
 1.  : to measure by means of a meter
 < water … is metered and charged for — Tom Marvel >
 2.  : to supply (fuel, oil, or other fluid) in a measured or regulated amount
 < fuel is then metered to the engine by the idle adjusting needle — H.F.Blanchard & Ralph Ritchen >
 3.
 a.  : to print postal indicia on by means of a postage meter
 b.  : to imprint a revenue stamp on by means of a machine similar to a postage meter
 intransitive verb
 : to meter a fluid (as fuel or oil)
 < the drilled opening in the metering jet controls the amount of fuel that can pass through the main fuel supply system — William Landon >
 < a metering pump for molasses >
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