A person who is present and participates in a meeting.
1An English heretic, Cole of Faversham, said that the doctrine of predestination was meeter for devils than for Christians.
2Twere better and meeter thy presence to leave, For, if the eye see not, the heart doth not grieve.'
3Nay, but let the minstrel cease, that we may all alike make merry, hosts and guest, since it is far meeter so.
4And what you are offering this innocent child to-day is meeter to be called an idol, a devilish simulacrum, than a doll.
5It was the first time that a drugs "meeter and greeter" had been successfully prosecuted, Dublin Circuit Criminal Court was told.
6Yea, and it is far meeter for thyself, O queen, to utter thy word to the stranger alone, and to listen to his speech.
7Then he smiled and said; As for that which thou sayest, that she had been meeter for me than thou, I know not this word.
8Meeter challenged me to repeat seven years ago: I am gay.
9The milling, the lost, the late, the meeters, the met, the platform-cleaning machines.
10Each set of doors was mobbed by big knots of meeters and greeters.
11The meeters and greeters descend on the Messiah like a mob.
12Meeter was my field education supervisor during my final year at Princeton Theological Seminary.
13The "train meeters" were gathered together inside of an hour.
14The meeters and greeters are here to keep the press and the people away from the Messiah.
15Dr. Daniel Meeter asked me to repeat those words as we walked and talked in Prospect Park in Brooklyn.
16"This is not the way a New Meeter should greet people," the visitor said reprovingly.