mont-, mount-

(Latin: mountain, hill)


amount
1. The total of two or more quantities; the aggregate.
2. A number; a sum.
3. A principal plus its interest, as in a loan.
4. The full effect or meaning; the import.
5. Quantity: a great amount of intelligence.
6. To add up in number or quantity: "The purchases amounted to a lot of money."
7. To add up in importance or effect: "That plan will never amount to anything.
8. To be equivalent or tantamount: "Such accusations will amount to an indictment in court."
9. Etymology: from about 1250, "to go up, rise," from Old French amonter, from à mont, "upward"; literally, "to the hill" or "mountain", from Latin ad-, "to" plus montem of "mountain". The meaning of "to rise in number" or "quality" (so as to reach) is from about 1300.
catamount
1. A wild animal of the cat family; especially, the cougar or the lynx.
2. A mountain lion or "cat of the mountain".
demountable
1. To remove from a mounting, setting, or place of support; such as, a gun.
2. To take apart; to disassemble.
3. Capable of being dismounted, dismantled, or removed and readily reassembled or repositioned.
dismount
1. To get off or down, as from a horse.
2. To get out of a vehicle.
3. To remove from a support, setting, or mounting.
4. To unseat or throw off, as from a horse.
5. To disassemble (a mechanism, for example).
6. The act or manner of dismounting, especially from a horse.
7. A move in gymnastics whereby the gymnast gets off an apparatus or completes a floor exercise, typically landing on both feet.
8. Etymology: Probably an alteration of obsolete French desmonter, "to unseat" des-, dis- plus monter, "to mount"; from Latin mons, mont-, "mountain".
dismountable
Capable of being dismounted.
insurmountable (in" sur MOUN tuh b'l)
1. Something which cannot be passed over, overcome, or conquered; such as, "an insurmountable obstacle", or "an insurmountable task".
2. Impossible to surmount; insuperable; unachievable: "He had insurmountable difficulties getting back into his house; so he had to call a locksmith."
insurmountably
1. Incapable of being surmounted, passed over, or overcome.
2. Too great to be overcome.
marmot
1. Any bushy-tailed, stocky rodent of the genus Marmota; such as, the woodchuck.
2. Any of certain related animals; such as, the prairie dogs.
3. Etymology: Italian marmotta, marmotto; probably French and Latin, mus montanus, or mus montis; literallyi, "mountain mouse" or "mountain rat".
misotramontanism
A hater of anything foreign or of the unknown; such as, "someone who hates what is beyond the mountains”.
misotramontanist
Someone who is averse to anything foreign or to the unknown; literally “one who hates what is beyond the mountains”.
montage
1. A picture or other work of art composed by assembling, overlaying, and overlapping many different materials or pieces collected from different sources; such as, photographs, magazines, and other pictures.
2. The artistic technique of creating a montage.
3. A motion-picture sequence consisting of a series of dissolves, superimpositions, or cuts used to condense time or to suggest memories or hallucinations.
4. A style of moviemaking that makes extensive use of cuts, camera movements, and changes of camera position, particularly to set up new meanings not conveyed by the filmed action itself.
5. From early 20th century French monter "to mount".
Montani semper liberi.
Mountaineers are always free.

Motto of the State of West Virginia, USA.

monticole, monticolous, monticola
Living or dwelling in mountainous habitats.
mound, mounding, mounded, mounds
1. A pile of earth, gravel, sand, rocks, or debris heaped for protection or concealment.
2. A natural elevation; such as, a small hill.
3. A raised mass, as of hay; a heap.
4. In archaeology: A large artificial pile of earth or stones often marking a burial site.
5. Baseball: The slightly elevated pitcher's area in the center of the diamond.
6. Archaic: A hedge or fence.
7. Etymology: It is believed by some scholars that the English mound was influenced in form by mount, "hill, mountain".
mount
1. Abbreviated as Mt.; a mountain or hill. Used especially as part of a proper name.
2. Any of the seven fleshy cushions around the edges of the palm of the hand in palmistry.
3. To go up; climb; ascend; such as, to mount the stairs.
2. To get up on (a platform, a horse, etc.).
3. To set or place at an elevation; that is, to mount a house on stilts.
4. To furnish with a horse or other animal for riding.
5. To prepare and to launch, as a military attack or a military campaign.
6. To attach to or to fix on or in a support, backing, setting, etc.: to mount a photograph; to mount a diamond in a ring.
7. To prepare (an animal body or skeleton) as a specimen.
8. To prepare (a sample) for examination by a microscope, as by placing it on a slide.
9. Etymology: When "mount" is a verb; from the 13th century, from Old French monter, "to go up, to ascend, to climb, to mount"; from Vulgar Latin montare, from Latin mons (genitive montis) "mountain". Meaning "to set" or "to place in position" first recorded 1539. The sense of "to get up on (a horse, etc.) to ride" is from 1509. The colloquial noun meaning "a horse for riding" was first recorded 1856.
10. Etymology: When "mount" is used as a noun; "hill, mountain", from Anglo-French mount, from Old French mont, "mountain"; also, partly from Old English munt, "mountain"; both the Old English and the Old French came from Latin montem, "mountain".

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