Old Testament readings use the Septuagint , the Scripture the apostles quoted. Masoretic numbering shown for reference.Learn why

mother

[L. mater, mother; matrix, the womb; materia, matter, stuff, materials of which any thing is made. We observe that in some other languages, as well as in English, the same word signifies a female parent, and the thick slime formed in vinegar; and in all the languages of Europe here cited, the orthography is nearly the same as that of mud and matter. The question then occurs whether the name of a female parent originated in a word expressing matter, mold; either the soil of the earth, as the producer, or the like substance, when shaped and fitted as a mold for castings; or whether the name is connected with the opinion that the earth is the mother of all productions; whence the word mother-earth. We are informed by a fragment of Sanchoniathon, that the ancient Phenicians considered mud to be the substance from which all things were formed. See IViud. The word matter is evidently from the Ar. madda, to secrete, eject or discharge a purulent substance;

mother

That which has produced any thing. Alas, poor country! it cannot . Be called our mother, but our grave. So our native land is called mother country, and a plant from which a slip or cion is taken, is called the mother plant. In this use, mother may be considered as an adjective.

mother

That which has preceded in time; the oldest or chief of any thing; as a mother-church.

mother

Hysterical passion.

mother

A familiar term of address or appellation of an old woman or matron.

mother

An appellation given to a woman who exercises care and tenderness towards another, or gives parental advice; as when one says,” a woman has been a mother to me.” .

mother

A thick slimy substance concreted in liquors, particularly in vinegar, very different from scum or common lees.

mother

adjective
Native; natural; received by birth; as mother-wit.

mother

Native; vernacular; received from parents or ancestors; as mother-tongue.

mother

verb intransitive
To concrete, as the thick matter of liquors.

mother

verb transitive
To adopt as a son or daughter.