| 1. | the substance or substances of which any physical object consists or is composed: the matter of which the earth is made. |
| 2. | physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, esp. as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like. |
| 3. | something that occupies space. |
| 4. | a particular kind of substance: coloring matter. |
| 5. | a situation, state, affair, or business: a trivial matter. |
| 6. | an amount or extent reckoned approximately: a matter of 10 miles. |
| 7. | something of consequence: matter for serious thought. |
| 8. | importance or significance: decisions of little matter. |
| 9. | difficulty; trouble (usually prec. by the): There is something the matter. |
| 10. | ground, reason, or cause: a matter for complaint. |
| 11. | the material or substance of a discourse, book, etc., often as distinguished from its form. |
| 12. | things put down in words, esp. printed: reading matter. |
| 13. | things sent by mail: postal matter. |
| 14. | a substance discharged by a living body, esp. pus. |
| 15. | Philosophy.
|
| 16. | Law. statement or allegation. |
| 17. | Printing.
|
| 18. | Christian Science. the concept of substance shaped by the limitations of the human mind. |
| 19. | to be of importance; signify: It matters little. |
| 20. | Pathology. to suppurate. |
| 21. | a matter of life and death, something of vital or crucial importance. |
| 22. | as a matter of fact, in reality; actually; in fact: As a matter of fact, there is no substance to that rumor. |
| 23. | for that matter, as far as that is concerned; as for that: For that matter, you are no better qualified to judge than I. Also, for the matter of that. |
| 24. | no matter,
|

mat·ter (māt'ər) n.
To be of importance: "Love is most nearly itself/When here and now cease to matter" (T.S. Eliot). See Synonyms at count1. [Middle English, from Old French matere, from Latin māteria, wood, timber, matter, from māter, mother (because the woody part was seen as the source of growth); see māter- in Indo-European roots.] |
In physics, something that has mass and is distinct from energy. (See phases of matter.)
matter mat·ter (māt'ər)
n.
Something that occupies space and can be perceived by one or more senses.
A specific type of substance.
Discharge or waste, such as pus or feces, from a living organism.