meiosis

/maɪˈoʊ.sɪs/

UK: /maɪˈəʊ.sɪs/

MAꞮOƱ · sɪs (2 syllables)

English Noun
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Definition

A figure of speech whereby something is made to seem smaller or less important than it actually is.

Etymology

From Ancient Greek μείωσις (meíōsis, “a lessening”), from μειόω (meióō, “I lessen”), from μείων (meíōn, “less”). The biological sense was coined by British biologists John Bretland Farmer and John Edmund Sharrock Moore in 1905 as maiosis in a paper in the Quarterly Journal of Microscopic Science, with the spelling corrected on etymological grounds later that year. Doublet of miosis.

Example Sentences

  • "I knew, with one of those secret knowledges that can exist between two people, that her suicide was a direct result of my having told her of my own attempt – I had told it with a curt meiosis that was meant to conceal depths; and she had called my bluff one final time."
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