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Synonyms

messenger

American  
[mes-uhn-jer] / ˈmɛs ən dʒər /

noun

messengers plural
  1. a person who carries a message or goes on an errand for another, especially as a matter of duty or business.

    Synonyms:
    courier, bearer
  2. a person employed to convey official dispatches or to go on other official or special errands.

    a bank messenger.

  3. Nautical.

    1. a rope or chain made into an endless belt to pull on an anchor cable or to drive machinery from some power source, as a capstan or winch.

    2. a light line by which a heavier line, as a hawser, can be pulled across a gap between a ship and a pier, a buoy, another ship, etc.

  4. Oceanography. a brass weight sent down a line to actuate a Nansen bottle or other oceanographic instrument.

  5. Archaic. a herald, forerunner, or harbinger.


verb (used with object)

  1. to send by messenger.

messenger British  
/ ˈmɛsɪndʒə /

noun

  1. a person who takes messages from one person or group to another or others

  2. a person who runs errands or is employed to run errands

  3. a carrier of official dispatches; courier

  4. nautical

    1. a light line used to haul in a heavy rope

    2. an endless belt of chain, rope, or cable, used on a powered winch to take off power

  5. archaic a herald

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

Noun Inflected Forms

Etymology

Origin of messenger

1175–1225; Middle English messager, messangere < Anglo-French; Old French messagier. See message, -er 2

Explanation

Use the noun messenger to refer to someone who brings you a message. Your mail carrier delivering a postcard and your gossipy friend calling to give you the latest news can each be described as a messenger. Delivering messages for others is certainly a time-honored profession, since even the gods of Antiquity needed someone to do it — the Greeks had Hermes and the Romans had Mercury as their messenger gods. A messenger carries a message, and that's where the word itself comes from: the Latin root of message is missus, which means "a sending away, sending, dispatching" and is the past participle of mittere, "send."

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Vocabulary lists containing messenger

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“I’m in Las Vegas. Can’t comment, share, or post. Still can’t use messenger at all,” one Facebook user commented on Downdetector.

From Barron's • Jun. 12, 2026

The Dudamel who led this “Cantata Criolla” is now a messenger, and Sunday’s concert was not a party but a mission.

From Los Angeles Times • Jun. 9, 2026

As part of the push for a "sovereign internet", the government is promoting a state-backed Russian messenger called MAX.

From BBC • Apr. 24, 2026

When lactate binds to this receptor, astrocytes become activated and release glutamate, a chemical messenger.

From Science Daily • Apr. 6, 2026

I told the messenger to say that I would attend to his wishes in the morning; I was busy just at the moment.

From "Dracula" by Bram Stoker

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