| a calculus or concretion found in the stomach or intestines of certain animals, esp. ruminants, formerly reputed to be an effective remedy for poison. |
| a children's mummer's parade, as on the Fourth of July, with prizes for the best costumes. |
minor (ˈmaɪnə) ![]() | |
| —adj | |
| 1. | lesser or secondary in amount, extent, importance, or degree: a minor poet; minor burns |
| 2. | of or relating to the minority |
| 3. | below the age of legal majority |
| 4. | music |
| a. harmonic minor scale See also melodic minor scale (of a scale) having a semitone between the second and third and fifth and sixth degrees (natural minor) | |
| b. (of a key) based on the minor scale | |
| c. (postpositive) denoting a specified key based on the minor scale: C minor | |
| d. (of an interval) reduced by a semitone from the major | |
| e. (of a chord, esp a triad) having a minor third above the root | |
| f. minor key See also minor mode (esp in jazz) of or relating to a chord built upon a minor triad and containing a minor seventh: a minor ninth | |
| 5. | logic (of a term or premise) having less generality or scope than another term or proposition |
| 6. | (US) education of or relating to an additional secondary subject taken by a student |
| 7. | (Brit) (immediately postpositive) the younger or junior: sometimes used after the surname of a schoolboy if he has an older brother in the same school: Hunt minor |
| 8. | (postpositive) bell-ringing of, relating to, or denoting a set of changes rung on six bells: grandsire minor |
| —n | |
| 9. | a person or thing that is lesser or secondary |
| 10. | a person below the age of legal majority |
| 11. | (US), (Canadian) education a subsidiary subject in which a college or university student needs fewer credits than in his or her major |
| 12. | music a minor key, chord, mode, or scale |
| 13. | logic a minor term or premise |
| 14. | maths |
| a. a determinant associated with a particular element of a given determinant and formed by removing the row and column containing that element | |
| b. cofactor, Also called: signed minor the number equal to this reduced determinant | |
| 15. | (capital) another name for Minorite |
| —vb (usually foll by in) | |
| 16. | (US) education to take a minor |
| [C13: from Latin: less, smaller; related to Old High German minniro smaller, Gothic minniza least, Latin minuere to diminish, Greek meiōn less] | |
minor mi·nor (mī'nər)
adj.
Lesser or smaller in amount, extent, or size.
Lesser in seriousness or danger.