be met with
1Met-Rx — is a brand name of nutritional supplements, originally produced by Met Rx, Inc., a California company started by A. Scott Connelly, and sold several times since. The brand is best known as the product to pioneer a new category of bodybuilding… …
2Met — or MET or The Met may refer to: Contents 1 In the arts 2 In computing and the Internet 3 In medicine and physiology 4 In public safety …
3Met English — Language (MEL) was an early computer language used by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (MetLife). It enabled MetLife to establish itself as a strong technology company in the early days of commercial computing. It has now been retired and… …
4C-Met — MET (mesenchymal epithelial transition factor) is a proto oncogene that encodes a protein MET, also known as c Met or hepatocyte growth factor receptor (HGFR). MET is a membrane receptor that is essential for embryonic development and wound… …
5Met Office — UKMET redirects here. For the model, see Unified Model. Met Office Current logo, as of 2009 Agency overview Formed 1854 Jurisdiction …
6Met — Meet Meet (m[=e]t), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Met} (m[e^]t); p. pr. & vb. n. {Meeting}.] [OE. meten, AS. m[=e]tan, fr. m[=o]t, gem[=o]t, a meeting; akin to OS. m[=o]tian to meet, Icel. m[ae]ta, Goth. gam[=o]tjan. See {Moot}, v. t.] 1. To join, or come …
7MET ART — Not to be confused with the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.. MetArt MET ART logo. Founded circa 1999 Headquarters …
8Met- — Meta Met a , Met Met [Gr. meta between, with, after; akin to AS. mid with, G. mit, Goth. mi[thorn], E. mid, in midwife.] 1. A prefix meaning between, with, after, behind, over, about, reversely; as, metachronism, the error of placing after the… …
9People With AIDS — The People With AIDS (PWA) Self Empowerment Movement is a social movement by those diagnosed with HIV/AIDS which grew out of San Francisco in the early 1980s. The PWA Self Empowerment Movement believes that those diagnosed as having AIDS should… …
10List of English words with disputed usage — Some English words are often used in ways that are contentious between writers on usage and prescriptive commentators. The contentious usages are especially common in spoken English. While in some circles the usages below may make the speaker… …