midterm election |
in the U.S., an election typically featuring candidates for Congress, state legislatures, and state governors that occurs during an even-numbered year that is not a year during which a presidential election is held. |
midtown |
a central area of a city between downtown and uptown. |
mid-Victorian |
pertaining to, characteristic of, or taking place during the middle period of Queen Victoria's reign in Great Britain. [3 definitions] |
midway |
halfway between two points. [2 definitions] |
midweek |
the middle part of the week. [2 definitions] |
Midwest |
the north central flatlands of the United States from the Rocky Mountains through Ohio, Kansas, and Missouri; Middle West. |
Midwestern |
characteristic of, pertaining to, or in the Middle West region of the United States. |
midwife |
a person who is trained to assist women during childbirth. |
midwifery |
the practice or technique of being a midwife. |
midwinter |
the middle part of winter. [2 definitions] |
midyear |
the middle part of a fiscal, academic, or calendar year. [3 definitions] |
mien |
one's manner or bearing. |
miff |
a state of sulky bad humor; pique. [3 definitions] |
miffed |
annoyed; offended. |
miffy |
(informal) easily annoyed or offended; irritable. |
MIG |
any of several Soviet-made fighter planes named for the designers, Mikoyan and Gurevich. |
might1 |
used to express the possibility of something happening or being true. [5 definitions] |
might2 |
effective force or power; ability. [2 definitions] |
might as well |
used to indicate an alternative course of action that cannot be any worse than what one is currently doing and may be the best course of action, even though it may not be the ideal thing or the thing that one had originally planned. [2 definitions] |
mightily |
with strength, power, or energy. [2 definitions] |
might've |
contracted form of "might have." |