mirror

[mir-er] /ˈmɪr ər/
noun
1.
a reflecting surface, originally of polished metal but now usually of glass with a silvery, metallic, or amalgam backing.
2.
such a surface set into a frame, attached to a handle, etc., for use in viewing oneself or as an ornament.
3.
any reflecting surface, as the surface of calm water under certain lighting conditions.
4.
Optics. a surface that is either plane, concave, or convex and that reflects rays of light.
5.
something that gives a minutely faithful representation, image, or idea of something else:
Gershwin's music was a mirror of its time.
6.
a pattern for imitation; exemplar:
a man who was the mirror of fashion.
7.
a glass, crystal, or the like, used by magicians, diviners, etc.
verb (used with object)
8.
to reflect in or as if in a mirror.
9.
to reflect as a mirror does.
10.
to mimic or imitate (something) accurately.
11.
to be or give a faithful representation, image, or idea of:
Her views on politics mirror mine completely.
adjective
12.
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
13.
with mirrors, by or as if by magic.
Origin
1175-1225; Middle English mirour < Old French mireo(u)r, equivalent to mir- (see mirage) + -eo(u)r < Latin -ātor -ator
Related forms
mirrorlike, adjective
unmirrored, adjective
Can be confused
mere, mère, mirror.
Synonyms
6. model, epitome, paradigm.
Examples from the web for mirror
  • Researchers have found the clearest evidence yet for a superconducting state that differs from its mirror image.
  • As a result, the flow of the preferred molecule across the film was five times as fast as that of its undesirable mirror image.
  • There's also an image of her bare backside, taken as she looks into a mirror.
  • Enlargement fatigue has a mirror image: apathy and resentment.
  • Part of the problem is the sheer ferocity of the downturn, a mirror image of the over-inflation of last year's bubble.
  • The percentages then switch, becoming nearly a mirror image of what they had been.
  • Parabolic troughs are large, curved mirrors that capture sunlight and reflect it onto an oil-filled pipe in the mirror's center.
  • Large biological molecules can be configured into two mirror-image orientations: left-handed or right-handed.
  • The long day closed, in other words, on a mirror image of its beginning.
  • Sometimes the image you see in that mirror is not a pleasant one.
British Dictionary definitions for mirror

mirror

/ˈmɪrə/
noun
1.
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
2.
such a reflecting surface mounted in a frame
3.
any reflecting surface
4.
a thing that reflects or depicts something else: the press is a mirror of public opinion
verb
5.
(transitive) to reflect, represent, or depict faithfully: he mirrors his teacher's ideals
Derived Forms
mirror-like, adjective
Word Origin
C13: from Old French from mirer to look at, from Latin mīrārī to wonder at
Word Origin and History for mirror
n.

early 13c., from Old French mireoir "a reflecting glass, looking glass; observation, model, example," earlier miradoir (11c.), from mirer "look at" (oneself in a mirror), "observe, watch, contemplate," from Vulgar Latin *mirare "to look at," variant of Latin mirari "to wonder at, admire" (see miracle). Figurative usage is attested from c.1300. Used in divination since classical and biblical times; mirrors in modern England are the subject of at least 14 known superstitions, according to folklorists. Belief that breaking one brings bad luck is attested from 1777. The Spanish cognate, mirador (from mirar "to look, look at, behold"), has come to mean "watch tower." Mirror ball attested from 1968.

v.

"to reflect," 1590s, from mirror (n.). Related: Mirrored; mirroring. The Middle English verb mirouren (early 15c.) meant "to be a model" (for conduct, behavior, etc.), while miren (mid-14c., from Old French mirer) meant "to look in a mirror."

mirror in Science
mirror
  (mĭr'ər)   
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.
mirror in Technology

1. Writing duplicate data to more than one device (usually two hard disks), in order to protect against loss of data in the event of device failure. This technique may be implemented in either hardware (sharing a disk controller and cables) or in software. It is a common feature of RAID systems.
Several operating systems support software disk mirroring or disk-duplexing, e.g. Novell NetWare.
See also Redundant Array of Independent Disks.
Interestingly, when this technique is used with magnetic tape storage systems, it is usually called "twinning".
A less expensive alternative, which only limits the amount of data loss, is to make regular backups from a single disk to magnetic tape.
2. mirror site.
(1998-06-11)