mirror

[ mir-er ]
/ ˈmɪr ər /

noun

verb (used with object)

adjective

Music. (of a canon or fugue) capable of being played in retrograde or in inversion, as though read in a mirror placed beside or below the music.

Idioms for mirror

    with mirrors, by or as if by magic.

Origin of mirror

1175–1225; Middle English mirour < Old French mireo(u)r, equivalent to mir- (see mirage) + -eo(u)r < Latin -ātor -ator

OTHER WORDS FROM mirror

mir·ror·like, adjective un·mir·rored, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH mirror

mere mère mirror

Example sentences from the Web for mirror

British Dictionary definitions for mirror

mirror
/ (ˈmɪrə) /

noun

a surface, such as polished metal or glass coated with a metal film, that reflects light without diffusion and produces an image of an object placed in front of it
such a reflecting surface mounted in a frame
any reflecting surface
a thing that reflects or depicts something else the press is a mirror of public opinion

verb

(tr) to reflect, represent, or depict faithfully he mirrors his teacher's ideals

Derived forms of mirror

mirror-like, adjective

Word Origin for mirror

C13: from Old French from mirer to look at, from Latin mīrārī to wonder at

Scientific definitions for mirror

mirror
[ mĭrər ]

An object that causes light or other radiation to be reflected from its surface, with little or no diffusion. Common mirrors consist of a thin sheet or film of metal, such as silver, behind or covering a glass pane. Mirrors are used extensively in telescopes, microscopes, lasers, fiber optics, measuring instruments, and many other devices. See more at reflection.