mess
(mĕs)n.1. a. A cluttered, untidy, usually dirty place or condition: The kitchen was a mess.
b. Something that is disorderly or dirty, as a accumulation or heap: Who left the mess on the kitchen floor?
2. a. A confused, troubling, or embarrassing condition or situation: With divorce and bankruptcy proceedings pending, his personal life was in a mess.
b. One that is in such a condition: They made a mess of their marriage. Her boyfriend is a real mess.
3. a. An amount of food, as for a meal, course, or dish: cooked up a mess of fish.
b. A serving of soft, semiliquid food: a mess of porridge.
4. a. A group of people, usually soldiers or sailors, who regularly eat meals together.
b. Food or a meal served to such a group: took mess with the enlistees.
c. A mess hall.
v. messed, mess·ing, mess·es
v.tr. To make disorderly or dirty: The wind has messed your hair. The puppy messed the floor.
v.intr.1. To cause or make a mess.
2. To intrude; interfere: messing in the neighbors' affairs.
3. To take a meal in a military mess.
Phrasal Verbs: mess around (or about)1. To pass time aimlessly or frivolously.
2. To associate casually or playfully: liked to mess around with pals on days off.
3. To be sexually unfaithful.
mess up1. To botch; bungle: messed up the entire project.
2. To make a mistake, especially from nervousness or confusion: messed up and dropped the ball.
3. Slang To beat up; manhandle: got messed up in a brawl.
4. To cause to be confused or troubled: The divorce really messed him up.
mess with1. To use or handle something carelessly; fiddle: messed with the remote until he broke it.
2. To fight or get into conflict with: I wouldn't mess with him—he knows judo.
3. To tease or play a joke on: Don't let that remark bother you—she's just messing with you.
[Middle English mes, course of a meal, food, group of people eating together, from Old French, from Late Latin missus, from Latin, past participle of mittere, to place.]
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
mess
(mɛs) n1. a state of confusion or untidiness, esp if dirty or unpleasant: the house was in a mess.
2. a chaotic or troublesome state of affairs; muddle: his life was a mess.
3. informal a dirty or untidy person or thing
4. (Cookery) archaic a portion of food, esp soft or semiliquid food
5. (Military) a place where service personnel eat or take recreation: an officers' mess.
6. (Military) a group of people, usually servicemen, who eat together
7. (Military) the meal so taken
8. mess of pottage a material gain involving the sacrifice of a higher value
vb9. (often foll by: up) to muddle or dirty
10. (intr) to make a mess
11. (often foll by: with) to interfere; meddle
12. (Military) (intr; often foll by with or together) military to group together, esp for eating
[C13: from Old French mes dish of food, from Late Latin missus course (at table), from Latin mittere to send forth, set out]
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
mess
(mɛs)
n. 1. a dirty or untidy condition.
2. a person or thing that is dirty, untidy, or disordered.
3. a state of confusion.
4. an unpleasant or difficult situation.
5. a dirty or untidy mass: a mess of papers.
6. a group regularly taking their meals together.
7. the meal so taken.
9. a quantity of food sufficient for a dish or a single occasion.
10. sloppy or unappetizing food.
11. a dish or quantity of soft or liquid food.
12. a person whose life, mental state, or affairs are in a state of confusion.
v.t. 13. to make dirty or untidy (often fol. by up): Don't mess up the room.
14. to make a mess or muddle of (affairs, responsibilities, etc.) (often fol. by up).
v.i. 15. to make a mess.
16. to eat in company, esp. as a member of a mess.
17. mess around or
about, a. to busy oneself aimlessly; waste time.
b. to involve oneself, esp. for reprehensible purposes: to mess around with gamblers.
c. to have sexual affairs; philander.
18. mess in or with, to intervene officiously; meddle.
19. mess up, a. to perform poorly; produce errors or confusion.
b. to treat roughly; beat up.
[1250–1300; Middle English mes < Old French: a course at a meal < Late Latin missus what is sent (i.e., put on the table), n. use of past participle of Latin mittere to send]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.