- nounmesh (noun) · meshes (plural noun)
- material made of a network of wire or thread:"mesh for fishing nets" · "finer wire meshes are used for smaller particles"
- medicinea type of netting of plastic or organic material that may be implanted to support various tissues or organs:"the mesh was implanted at the site of the fistula"
- the spacing between the individual strands that form mesh:"if the mesh is too big, small rabbits can squeeze through"
- used with reference to a complex or constricting situation:"the raveled mesh of events and her own emotions"
- an interlaced structure:"cell fragments that agglutinate and form intricate meshes"
- computinga representation of a given shape or form, consisting of an arrangement of a finite set of geometric components.
- computinga computer network in which each computer or processor is connected to a number of others, especially so as to form a multidimensional lattice:"multiple boards can be arranged in various multiprocessing architectures, including 3-D mesh, ring, or hypercube"
verbmesh (verb) · meshes (third person present) · meshed (past tense) · meshed (past participle) · meshing (present participle)- (of the teeth of a gearwheel) lock together or be engaged with another gearwheel:"one gear meshes with the input gear"
- make or become entangled or entwined:"their fingers meshed" · "I don't want to get meshed in the weeds"
- be in or bring into harmony:"her memory of events doesn't mesh with the world around her"
- computingrepresent (a geometric object) as a set of finite elements for computational analysis or modeling:"choosing the icon allows you to automatically mesh your design"
Originlate Middle English: probably from an unrecorded Old English word related to (and perhaps reinforced in Middle English by) Middle Dutch maesche, of Germanic origin.Similar and Opposite Wordsnoun- material made of a network of wire or thread:
- the spacing between the individual strands that form mesh:
- used with reference to a complex or constricting situation:
verb- (of the teeth of a gearwheel) lock together or be engaged with another gearwheel:
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