mis-

prefix

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *mey-? Proto-Indo-European *meyth₂-der. Proto-Germanic *missaz Proto-Germanic *missa- Proto-West Germanic *missa- Old English mis- Middle English mys- English mis- From Middle English mys-, mis-, from Old English mis- (“mis-”), from Proto-West Germanic *missa-, from Proto-Germanic *missa- (“wrongly, badly, mis-”), from the adjective *missaz (whence also miss), from Proto-Indo-European *mitˢtós (“mutual, reciprocal”), from *meyt(h₂)- (“to replace, switch, exchange, swap”), extended from the root *mey- (“to change”). Cognate with Scots mis- (“mis-”), Dutch mis- (“mis-”), German miss-, mis- (“mis-”), Danish mis- (“mis-”), Swedish miss- (“mis-”), Icelandic mis- (“mis-”). Compare also French més-, mé- (“mis-”), from Old French mes- (“mis-”), from Frankish *mis-, *missa- (“mis-”), from the same Proto-Germanic source above.

  1. inherited from *missa-
  2. inherited from *missa-
  3. inherited from mis-
  4. inherited from mys-

Definitions

  1. Bad or wrong

    Bad or wrong; badly or wrongly.

    • misbehaviour; misspelling; to misbehave
  2. Failed

    Failed; in a manner resulting in failure (to do, complete or achieve something).

    • miscarriage (failed carriage of a pregnancy to term), to miscarry, to misacknowledge
  3. Unintentional, accidental, mistaken

    Unintentional, accidental, mistaken; unintentionally, accidentally, mistakenly.

    • Yes, I did "Buy now", but it was a misclick.
    • I misclicked something on my computer, and now everything is in Hungarian!
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. False, falsely.

      • misaccusation, to misaccuse

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for mis-. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA