This prefix seems to be popping up quite a lot both in my conversations and on the Watch of late - not to mention a constant appearence on tv and stuff in programs that use 'big words that I don't understand' [See Arcade Fire; Roccoco], so can we just have a look at it.
Of the top of my head I'd define the word as meaning something like 'beyond', so let's go see how close I got.
Well - there are a nuber of meanings associated with change or alteration etc [eg metabolism], but specifically the one I was after was the one of 'behind or above', given as no.4 and pertaining to philosophy. Another interesting one that might be relevant was 'concerned with the concepts or results of a named discipline'.
Ok. Well I always understood 'metaphysical questions' [because I have to start somewhere] as being questions that you couldn't answer. [eg Does God Exist?] Science questions, on the otherhand, could be investigated, subjected to scrutiny and [crucially] the answers gained thereby were falsifiable. Metaphysical statements couldn't be falsified - so they weren't scientific. Now recently I had cause to try to outline the various branches of Philosophy to a kid I work with [whose degree course in Sociology seemed incredibly lacking in having provided him with any understanding of the subject - unless he's just a piss-poor student] and realised I had no real understanding of what 'metaphysics' was [as a discipline] beyond what I've said above. So I Wiki'd it and found something I really like; that no-one else agrees what it really is either, but that it can be summed up by the following. Metaphysics is about the nature of 'being'. It asks two fundamental questions; "What is there?" and "What's it like".
But hang on - I thought 'Ontology' was the study of the nature of 'being'; and thinking about it so it might be. Is Ontology the name for the major branch of metephysics concerned with answering the 'What's it like?" question. If so, what do we call the "What is there?" branch of metaphysics?
Now lets get on to metanarratives. Wikipedia again describes this as 'A narrative about narratives.....' [Ok - so is The Oxford History of English Literature a metanarrative?] '...... of historical meaning, experience or knowledge which offers a society legitimation [sic] through the completion of a/n [as yet unrealised] master idea. Hmm - that's loosing me a bit.
Next we progress to metafiction. Well - Iv'e already demonstrated in a different place how shaky my grasp on this idea is - but essentially we seem to be in the terratory where the dividing wall between consumer [of a work] and the participants within the work is broken down. The third [?] or fourth wall is torn aside and the reader/viewer becomes part of the work more so than he/she already is. [Milorad Pavic's books don't seem to fit this bill but are still described as 'metafiction' so clearly there seems to be more than just this one criteria. I'd guess The Princess Bride is stongly within this catagory of works.]
Well that's about as far as I've got with it all, but for one additional point. This seems to be a thing, a part of a larger movement about which my education [essentially science based, from the age of 12 to Masters level in my twenties {long time ago

[edit; Not really satisfied with this post, but I'll leave it just in case anything comes out of it which arouses comment from which I can learn
