If the neutral gets disconnected 'at the meter', then you simply lose your electricity supply - nothing else.What happens then?

nothing else other than the possibility that the potential on the Earth wires and Earth bonding wires ( relative to Ground ) rises up to 230 V, then you simply lose your electricity supply - nothing else.
nothing else other than the possibility that the potential on the Earth wires and Earth bonding wires ( relative to Ground ) rises up to 230 V
Items that bonded such as the gas meter will be at a hazardous voltage above Ground.
A neutral is only a neutral because it is deliberately Earthed somewhere along its path from the generator to your meter (at least once but may be a few more).
Why would that happen if the disconnection (break in neutral conductor) were "at the meter" (i.e.downstream of any N-E connection in a TN-C-S installation)?nothing else other than the possibility that the potential on the Earth wires and Earth bonding wires ( relative to Ground ) rises up to 230 V
the house's neutral is connected to the earth at the meter (and then to an earth rod as well as various copper pipes above and below ground).

this is one borrowed from Do I need an Earth Rod Fitted? which has developed along similar lines.Quite so- but,as I said in my first response, there is only a possible problem/danger (other than 'loss of supply) if the break in the neutral is upstream of any TN-C-S 'earth' connection to the incoming CNE (hence not if the break is "at the meter").It does depend on supply type, and where the break is
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