You could use greet or welcome.
No, the word "met" is a verb. It is the past tense of the verb to meet.
"Welcome" is a word for greeting guests to the home. It means "you are a guest and I am happy that you are here". The word is a greeting also for speaking lecturers to invite students to listen. It is a warm greeting to invite another person to share hospitality. The word today comes from old English phrase, "well come" similar to "well met". It was an expression of approval when another person was greeted upon meeting. While "well met" has dropped out of the language as a phrase, welcome has become a standard greeting.
Superb is another word for excellent. Superb is another word for excellent.
it has three: met - a - phase
Another word for shake is "Tremble".
Rendezvoused
Add another letter. men, met
No, the word 'at' is a preposition.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between a noun or a pronoun and another word in a sentence.EXAMPLESWe met Maxie at McDonald's. (met at McDonals's)The house at the corner is for sale. (house at corner)
The Afrikaans word "Met" means "With". The English word "Met" translates as "Ontmoet".
No, the word met is not an adverb.The word met is a verb for the past tense of "meet",
Met, as in "We have met before."
There isn't a twelve letter word, but if you add another letter "n" you get: entertain met (add letter "n") entertainment
The word 'met' is not a noun. The word 'met' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to meet (meets, meeting, met). The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective, a word to describe a noun (our met goals, the met criteria).The noun form for the verb to meet is the gerund, meeting, a common noun.
Met is German for mead.
No, the word 'at' is a preposition.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.A preposition is a word that shows the relationship between a noun or a pronoun and another word in a sentence.EXAMPLESWe met Maxie at McDonald's. (met at McDonals's)The house at the corner is for sale. (house at corner)
Thats easy for me to answer. I am one. Here it is: What did the diplomat major in?
No. The word met has a short E vowel sound. (The long E is in meet, meat, or mete.)