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Definition merit

Etymology

The noun is derived from Middle English merit, merite (“quality of person’s character or conduct deserving of reward or punishment; such reward or punishment; excellence, worthiness; benefit; right to be rewarded for spiritual service; retribution at doomsday; virtue through which Jesus Christ brings about salvation; virtue possessed by a holy person; power of a pagan deity”), from Anglo-Norman merit, merite, Old French merite (“moral worth, reward; merit”) (modern French mérite), from Latin meritum (“that which one deserves, deserts; benefit, reward, merit; service; kindness; importance, value, worth; blame, demerit, fault; grounds, reason”), neuter of meritus (“deserved, earned, obtained; due, proper, right; deserving, meritorious”), perfect passive participle of mere? (“to deserve, earn, obtain, merit; to earn a living”), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)mer- (“to allot, assign”). The English word is probably cognate with Ancient Greek ????? (méros, “component, part; portion, share; destiny, fate, lot”) and cognate with Old Occitan merit.

The verb is derived from Middle French meriter, Old French meriter (“to deserve, merit”) (modern French mériter), from merite: see further above. The word is cognate with Italian meritare (“to deserve, merit; to be worth; to earn”), Latin merit?re (“to earn regularly; to serve as a soldier”), Spanish meritar (“to deserve, merit; to earn”).

Noun

merit (countable and uncountable, plural merits)

  1. (countable) A claim to commendation or a reward.
  2. (countable) A mark or token of approbation or to recognize excellence.
  3. (countable, uncountable) Something deserving or worthy of positive recognition or reward.
  4. (uncountable, Buddhism, Jainism) The sum of all the good deeds that a person does which determines the quality of the person's next state of existence and contributes to the person's growth towards enlightenment.
  5. (uncountable, law) Usually in the plural form the merits: the substantive rightness or wrongness of a legal argument, a lawsuit, etc., as opposed to technical matters such as the admissibility of evidence or points of legal procedure; (by extension) the overall good or bad quality, or rightness or wrongness, of some other thing.
  6. (countable, obsolete) The quality or state of deserving retribution, whether reward or punishment.

Verb

merit (third-person singular simple present merits, present participle meriting, simple past and past participle merited)

  1. (transitive) To deserve, to earn.
  2. (intransitive) To be deserving or worthy.
  3. (transitive, obsolete, rare) To reward.

Results 379 Words with the letters MERIT

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8 letter words with the letters MERIT 
7 letter words with the letters MERIT 
6 letter words with the letters MERIT 
5 letter words with the letters MERIT 
4 letter words with the letters MERIT 
EMIR 7
EMIT 7
ITEM 7
ITER 4
MIRE 7
MITE 7
RIME 7
RITE 4
TERM 7
TIER 4
TIME 7
TIRE 4
TRIM 7
3 letter words with the letters MERIT 
IRE 3
MET 6
MIR 6
REI 3
REM 6
RET 3
RIM 6
TIE 3
2 letter words with the letters MERIT 
EM 5
ER 2
ET 2
IT 2
ME 5
MI 5
RE 2
TI 2

You can also try words with the phrase MERIT, words starting with the letters MERIT, or words ending in the letters MERIT.