a title of an unmarried woman or girl, usually used before the surname or sometimes alone in direct address
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
miss1 /mɪs/USA pronunciation
v.
n. [countable]
miss2 /mɪs/USA pronunciation n., pl. miss•es.
Miss., an abbreviation of:
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026- to fail to hit: [~ + object]missed the first pitch.[no object]He swung and missed.
- to fail to meet, catch, etc.:[~ + object]to miss a train.
- to fail to take advantage of:[~ + object]I missed a chance to meet him.
- to fail to be present for:[~ + object]to miss school.
- to notice the absence or loss of:[not: be + ~-ing* ~ + object]When did you first miss your wallet?
- to regret the absence or loss of: [~ + object]I miss you all dreadfully.[~ + verb-ing]He missed watching the African sunsets.
- to escape or avoid:[not: be + ~-ing* ~ + verb-ing]He just missed being caught.
- to fail to understand:[~ + object]to miss the point of a remark.
- (of a car, etc.) to misfire:[no object]The car was missing on all four cylinders.
- miss out, [no object] to fail to experience or take advantage of something:They missed out on a golden opportunity to improve their financial situation.
n. [countable]
- a failure of any kind, esp. to hit something:a couple of swings and misses and the game is over.
- a misfire.
- Idioms miss the boat, Informal. to fail to take advantage of an opportunity:He missed the boat by failing to apply for the grant.
miss2 /mɪs/USA pronunciation n., pl. miss•es.
- This word is used as a title of respect before the name of an unmarried woman:[Miss]Miss Mary Jones.
- This word is used as a polite form of address to a young woman:[Miss]Miss, please bring me some ketchup.
- This word is used as a title before the name of a place, or a quality, that a young woman has been selected to represent:[Miss]Miss America.
- [countable] a young unmarried woman;
girl. - Clothing misses, [plural]
- Clothinga range of sizes, chiefly from 6 to 20, for garments that fit women of average height and build.
- Clothinga garment in this size range.
Miss., an abbreviation of:
- Mississippi.
miss1
(mis),USA pronunciation v.t.
v.i.
n.
miss′a•ble, adj.
miss2 (mis),USA pronunciation n., pl. miss•es.
Miss.,
miss.,
- to fail to hit or strike:to miss a target.
- to fail to encounter, meet, catch, etc.:to miss a train.
- to fail to take advantage of:to miss a chance.
- to fail to be present at or for:to miss a day of school.
- to notice the absence or loss of:When did you first miss your wallet?
- to regret the absence or loss of:I miss you all dreadfully.
- to escape or avoid:He just missed being caught.
- to fail to perceive or understand:to miss the point of a remark.
v.i.
- to fail to hit something.
- to fail of effect or success;
be unsuccessful. - Idiomsmiss fire. See fire (def. 25).
- British Termsmiss out, [Chiefly Brit.]to omit;
leave out. - miss out on, to fail to take advantage of, experience, etc.:You missed out on a great opportunity.
n.
- a failure to hit something.
- a failure of any kind.
- an omission.
- a misfire.
- bef. 900; Middle English missen, Old English missan; cognate with Old Frisian missa, Middle Low German, Middle Dutch, Old High German missen, Old Norse missa to fail to hit or reach
miss2 (mis),USA pronunciation n., pl. miss•es.
- (cap.) a title of respect for an unmarried woman, conventionally prefixed to her name or to the name of that which she represents:Miss Mary Jones; Miss Sweden.
- (used by itself, as a term of address, esp. to a young woman):Miss, please bring me some ketchup.
- (cap.) a title prefixed to a mock surname used to represent a particular attribute of the person, esp. one excessively prominent:Miss Innocent; Miss Congeniality.
- a young unmarried woman;
girl:a radiant miss of 18 or so. - Clothingmisses:
- Clothinga range of sizes, chiefly from 6 to 20, for garments that fit women of average height and build.
- Clothingthe department or section of a store where these garments are sold.
- Clothinga garment in this size range.
- short for mistress 1600–10
- See Ms.
Miss.,
- Mississippi.
miss.,
- mission.
- missionary.
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
to fail to reach, hit, meet, find, or attain (some specified or implied aim, goal, target, etc) - (transitive)
to fail to attend or be present for: to miss a train, to miss an appointment - (transitive)
to fail to see, hear, understand, or perceive: to miss a point - (transitive)
to lose, overlook, or fail to take advantage of: to miss an opportunity - (transitive)
to leave out; omit: to miss an entry in a list - (transitive)
to discover or regret the loss or absence of: he missed his watch, she missed him - (transitive)
to escape or avoid (something, esp a danger), usually narrowly: he missed death by inches - miss the boat, miss the bus ⇒
to lose an opportunity
a failure to reach, hit, meet, find, etc - give something a miss ⇒
to avoid (something): give the lecture a miss, give the pudding a miss
an unmarried woman or girl, esp a schoolgirl
Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
Mississippi
'Miss' also found in these entries (note: many are not synonyms or translations):
A, a
- Aykroyd
- Beresford
- Collette
- Fräulein
- Lessing
- MIS
- MS
- Mackintosh
- Miss Julie
- Miss Lonelyhearts
- Miss.
- Mississippi
- Mlle
- Mr. Clean
- Mr. Cool
- Mr. Fixit
- Mr. Nice Guy
- Mr. Right
- Mrs
- Ms
- Natchez Trace
- Smith
- Spark
- Temple
- Wajda
- West
- York
- about
- aim
- air miss
- amiss
- attain
- balk
- ball
- boat
- bus
- connection
- cruise missile
- cue
- desiderate
- finger
- fire
- guess
- hit
- hit-and-miss
- hit-or-miss
- junior miss
- koumis
- left