Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Mot
Mot
(mōt)
, Verb.
 [
Sing. pres. ind. 
Mot
, Mote
, Moot 
(mōt)
, pl. 
Mot
, Mote
, Moote
, pres. subj. 
Mote
; imp. 
Moste
.] [See ] 
Must
, Verb.
[Obs.] 
May; must; might. 
He 
moot 
as well say one word as another Chaucer.
The wordes 
mote 
be cousin to the deed. Chaucer.
Men 
moot 
[i.e., one only] give silver to the poore freres. Chaucer.
So mote it be
, so be it; amen; – a phrase in some rituals, as that of the Freemasons.
 1. 
A word; hence, a motto; a device. 
[Obs.] 
Bp. Hall.
 Tarquin’s eye may read the 
mot 
afar. Shakespeare
2. 
A pithy or witty saying; a witticism. 
[A Gallicism] 
Here and there turns up a . . . savage 
mot
. N. Brit. Rev.
3. 
A note or brief strain on a bugle. 
Sir W. Scott.