| 1. | to assemble (troops, a ship's crew, etc.), as for battle, display, inspection, orders, or discharge. |
| 2. | to gather, summon, rouse (often fol. by up): He mustered all his courage. |
| 3. | to assemble for inspection, service, etc., as troops or forces. |
| 4. | to come together; collect; assemble; gather. |
| 5. | an assembling of troops or persons for formal inspection or other purposes. |
| 6. | an assemblage or collection. |
| 7. | the act of mustering. |
| 8. | Also called muster roll. (formerly) a list of the persons enrolled in a military or naval unit. |
| 9. | muster in, to enlist into service in the armed forces. |
| 10. | muster out, to discharge from service in the armed forces: He will be mustered out of the army in only two more months. |
| 11. | pass muster,
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mus·ter (mŭs'tər) v. mus·tered, mus·ter·ing, mus·ters v. tr.
To assemble or gather: mustering for inspection. n.
muster inTo enlist or be enlisted in military service: She mustered in at the age of 18. muster outTo discharge or be discharged from military service: He was mustered out when the war ended. Idiom(s): pass musterTo be judged as acceptable. [Middle English mustren, from Old French moustrer, from Latin mōnstrāre, to show, from mōnstrum, sign, portent, from monēre, to warn; see men-1 in Indo-European roots.] |
muster in
Enlist in military service. For example, They were mustered in at Fort Dix. The antonym is muster out, meaning "to leave or be discharged from military service," as in He was mustered out and given a dishonorable discharge. [First half of 1800s]