mice

See also: Mice, micë, miče, míce, and míče

English

Etymology

From Middle English mys, mice, muis, mise, mis, from Old English mȳs (mice), from an umlauted form of Proto-Germanic *mūsiz (mice), nominative and vocative plural of Proto-Germanic *mūs (mouse). Compare Scots mice, mise, myse, myce (mice), West Frisian mûzen (mice), Dutch muizen (mice), German Mäuse (mice), Swedish möss (mice), Faroese mýs (mice), Icelandic mýs (mice). More at mouse.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: mīs, IPA(key): /maɪs/
  • Audio (Southern England):(file)
  • Rhymes: -aɪs

Noun

mice

  1. plural of mouse

Verb

mice (third-person singular simple present mices, present participle micing, simple past and past participle miced)

  1. (Bermuda, chiefly in the form micin) To be distracted or inattentive (possibly alluding to a cat being distracted by a mouse).
    • 1984, Peter A. Smith, Fred M. Barritt, Bermewjan Vurds, Island Press:
      That cat's mysin, he doesn't see the dog coming.
    • 2015 December 9, Jack Gauntlett, “Bermudian sayings always raise a smile”, in The Royal Gazette[1], archived from the original on 11 December 2022:
      A breakfast diner might describe an incident with someone who was "not too tightly wrapped". Or not wanting to waste time on someone who was always "micin". Another breakfast guest might explode with "what'chu mean?", only to be told half-jokingly, “Bie ... shut yor mouth”.

References

Anagrams

Latvian

Noun

mice f (5th declension)

  1. (colloquial) hat
  2. (colloquial) cap
  3. (colloquial) tucker

Declension

Declension of mice (5th declension)
singular plural
nominative mice mices
genitive mices miču
dative micei micēm
accusative mici mices
instrumental mici micēm
locative micē micēs
vocative mice mices

Synonyms

See also