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  1. Dictionary
    merit
    /ˈmɛrɪt/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. deserve or be worthy of (reward, punishment, or attention): "the results have been encouraging enough to merit further investigation"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. the quality of being good and deserving to be praised or rewarded, or an advantage that something has: Proposals will be judged strictly on merit by an external committee. I fail to see the merit of organizing the work in that way. merit award/bonus/raise, etc. HR, WORKPLACE.

  3. The meaning of MERIT is a praiseworthy quality : virtue. How to use merit in a sentence.

  4. noun. claim to respect and praise; excellence; worth. Synonyms: esteem, value. something that deserves or justifies a reward or commendation; a commendable quality, act, etc.: The book's only merit is its sincerity.

  5. merit is usually the excellence that entitles to praise: a person of great merit. desert is the quality that entitles one to a just reward: according to her deserts. worth is always used in a favorable sense and signifies inherent value or goodness: The worth of your contribution is incalculable.

  6. Definition of merit noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. Merit means "worthiness or excellence." If you receive a certificate of merit in school, you are being recognized for doing a good job. As a verb, merit means "deserve." Your certificate might merit a prominent place on your bulletin board!

  8. n. 1. a. Superior quality or worth; excellence: a proposal of some merit; an ill-advised plan without merit. b. A quality deserving praise or approval; virtue: a store having the merit of being open late. 2. Demonstrated ability or achievement: promotions based on merit alone.

  9. MERIT definition: 1. good qualities that deserve praise: 2. to be important enough to receive attention or…. Learn more.

  10. merit. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English mer‧it1 /ˈmerɪt/ noun 1 [ countable] an advantage or good feature of something merit of The film has the merit of being short. The merit of the report is its realistic assessment of the changes required.

  11. Origin of Merit. From Middle English merite, from Old French merite, from Latin meritum (“that which one deserves, just deserts; service, kindness, benefit, fault, blame, demerit, grounds, reason, worth, value, importance" ), neuter of meritus, past participle of mereō (“I deserve, earn, gain, get, acquire" ), akin to Ancient Greek ...