noun, plural men, verb, manned, man⋅ning, interjection | 1. | an adult male person, as distinguished from a boy or a woman. |
| 2. | a member of the species Homo sapiens or all the members of this species collectively, without regard to sex: prehistoric man. |
| 3. | the human individual as representing the species, without reference to sex; the human race; humankind: Man hopes for peace, but prepares for war. |
| 4. | a human being; person: to give a man a chance; When the audience smelled the smoke, it was every man for himself. |
| 5. | a husband. |
| 6. | a male lover or sweetheart. |
| 7. | a male follower or subordinate: the king's men. He's the boss's number one man. |
| 8. | a male employee or representative, esp. of a company or agency: a Secret Service man; a man from the phone company. |
| 9. | a male having qualities considered typical of men or appropriately masculine: Be a man. The army will make a man of you. |
| 10. | a male servant. |
| 11. | a valet. |
| 12. | enlisted man. |
| 13. | an enthusiast or devotee: I like jazz, but I'm essentially a classics man. |
| 14. | Slang. male friend; ally: You're my main man. |
| 15. | a term of familiar address to a man; fellow: Now, now, my good man, please calm down. |
| 16. | Slang. a term of familiar address to a man or a woman: Hey, man, take it easy. |
| 17. | one of the pieces used in playing certain games, as chess or checkers. |
| 18. | History/Historical. a liegeman; vassal. |
| 19. | Obsolete. manly character or courage. |
| 20. | the man, Slang.
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| 21. | to furnish with men, as for service or defense. |
| 22. | to take one's place for service, as at a gun or post: to man the ramparts. |
| 23. | to strengthen, fortify, or brace; steel: to man oneself for the dangers ahead. |
| 24. | Falconry. to accustom (a hawk) to the presence of men. |
| 25. | Slang. an expression of surprise, enthusiasm, dismay, or other strong feeling: Man, what a ball game! |
| 26. | as one man, in complete agreement or accord; unanimously: They arose as one man to protest the verdict. |
| 27. | be one's own man,
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| 28. | man and boy, ever since childhood: He's been working that farm, man and boy, for more than 50 years. |
| 29. | man's man, a man who exemplifies masculine qualities. |
| 30. | to a man, with no exception; everyone; all: To a man, the members of the team did their best. |

man (mān) n. pl. men (měn)
[Middle English, from Old English mann; see man-1 in Indo-European roots.] Usage Note: Traditionally, many writers have used man and words derived from it to designate any or all of the human race regardless of sex. In fact, this is the oldest use of the word. In Old English the principal sense of man was "a human," and the words wer and wyf (or wæpman and wifman) were used to refer to "a male human" and "a female human" respectively. But in Middle English man displaced wer as the term for "a male human," while wyfman (which evolved into present-day woman) was retained for "a female human." Despite this change, man continued to carry its original sense of "a human" as well, resulting in an asymmetrical arrangement that many criticize as sexist. · Nonetheless, a majority of the Usage Panel still accepts the generic use of man, although the women members have significantly less enthusiasm for this usage than the men do. For example, the sentence If early man suffered from a lack of information, modern man is tyrannized by an excess of it is acceptable to 81 percent of the Panel—but a breakdown by sex shows that only 58 percent of the women Panelists accept it, while 92 percent of the men do. A majority of the Panel also accepts compound words derived from generic man. The sentence The Great Wall is the only man-made structure visible from space is acceptable to 86 percent (76 percent of the women and 91 percent of the men). The sentence "The history of language is the history of mankind" (James Bradstreet Greenough and George Lyman Kittredge) is acceptable to 76 percent (63 percent of the women and 82 percent of the men). The Panel finds such compounds less acceptable when applied to women, however; only 66 percent of the Panel members (57 percent of the women and 71 percent of the men) accept the use of the word manpower in the sentence Countries that do not permit women to participate in the work force are at a disadvantage in competing with those that do avail themselves of that extra source of manpower. · Similar controversy surrounds the generic use of -man compounds to indicate occupational and social roles. Thus the use of chairman in the sentence The chairman will be appointed by the Faculty Senate is acceptable to 67 percent of the Panel (52 percent of the women and 76 percent of the men). Approval rates fall much further, however, for -man compounds applied to women. Only 48 percent (43 percent of the women and 50 percent of the men) accept the use of the word in Emily Owen, chairman of the Mayor's Task Force, issued a statement assuring residents that their views would be solicited. A majority of the Panelists also rejects the verb man when used to refer to an activity performed by women. Fifty-six percent of the Panel (61 percent of the women and 54 percent of the men) disapprove of the sentence Members of the League of Women Voters will be manning the registration desk. See Usage Notes at -ess, men, people, person. |
men (měn) n. Plural of man. Usage Note: When man and men are used in compounds, such as fireman, firemen, salesman, and salesmen, both -man and -men are usually pronounced (mən). |
man
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"At the kinges court, my brother, Ech man for himself." [Chaucer, "Knight's Tale," c.1386]