μονοσύλλαβος. [168] 11, [202] 14. Monosyllabic. Lat. monosyllabus.

μόριον. [70] 10, [96] 3, [98] 6, [106] 11, 12, passim. Part, especially part of speech. Lat. pars, pars orationis. The meaning ‘part of speech’ appears in such passages as ποῖον ὄνομα ἢ ῥῆμα ἢ τῶν ἄλλων τι μορίων ([106] 12), τὰ μόρια τοῦ λόγου ([110] 1), ἓν μόριον λόγου ([126] 7), πᾶν ὄνομα καὶ ῥῆμα καὶ ἄλλο μόριον λέξεως ([168] 10). ‘Words’ simply might serve as a rendering in many cases, except that it is usually well to preserve Dionysius’ idea of ‘words in their syntactical relations,’ ‘words in a sentence.’ In [232] 18 the meaning may be ‘in every word’: so [130] 7, [134] 25, [220] 3, [222] 10, [224] 11.

μοῦσα. [126] 16, [252] 20. Music, melody. Lat. musica concinnitas. So μουσική [124] 20, [128] 18; ὁ μουσικός [138] 6.

μυγμός. [138] 10. A moaning, muttering, murmur, humming. Lat. gemitus. Cp. Demetr. p. 294, and Aesch. Eum. 117, 120.

μύκημα. [158] 13. Bellowing. Lat. mugitus.

νεαρός. [66] 16, [246] 5. Youthful. Lat. iuvenilis. Cp. note on μειρακιώδης in D.H. p. 196.

νήτη. [210] 7. Lowest note. Lat. ima chorda. See L. & S. s.v. νεάτη.

νόημα. [66] 5, [74] 16, [84] 6, [92] 17, [112] 15, [264] 16. Idea. Lat. sententia. Cp. νόησις (thought, perception) [74] 3, [268] 9; and D.H. p. 197.

νοῦς. [212] 15, [276] 1, 8. Meaning. Lat. sententia. Fr. sens, pensée.