To suffer a crushing defeat.
This comes from Napoleon's battle of Waterloo which he lost.
It means basically what it says. Essentially it's "nice to meet you." it is more of an old worldly british way of saying "nice to meet you". It's common for people from Ireland, Wales, and even some Australia to use this phrase.
It is from an old Irish blessing: May the road rise up to meet you. May the wind always be at your back. May the sun shine warm upon your face, and rains fall soft upon your fields. And until we meet again, May God hold you in the palm of His hand.
The word Rendezvous froms from French meaning "to meet you"
I'll meet you at your 10-20 after the morning intel dump.
nice to meet you
You do realize that Napolean's waterloo was the Battle of Waterloo. That's were the term comes from. Anyway, Napoleon lost at Waterloo, Belgium in 1815.
The phrase is short for "meet one's proverbial maker." It means to die and meet God.
The origin is where the x axis and the y axis meet. This is where your centre of enlargement is.
In English, this phrase translates to "Where did you meet your partner?"
At present day Waterloo, Belgium.
It is the origin
If you mean (0, 0) then it is the point of origin where the x and y axes meet at right angles on the coordinated plane.
The Spanish phrase "mucho gusto" translates to "nice to meet you" or "pleasure to meet you" in English.
If someone says, "Nice to meet you," you can say, "Likewise," or, "Nice to meet you too." They mean the same thing.
Waterloo was fought on 18 June 1815.
On the Cartesian plane the x and y axes meet at the origin and are perpendicular to each other
is called the 'origin' , and has the co-ordinates of (0,0)