-
ate
-
Ate
Atenounan ancient Greek goddess personifying the fatal blindness or recklessness that produces crime and the divine punishment that follows it.
-
ATE
ATEequipment that makes a series of tests automatically.
-
-ate
-atea suffix occurring in loanwords from Latin, its English distribution paralleling that of Latin. The form originated as a suffix added to a- stem verbs to form adjectives (separate ). The resulting form could also be used independently as a noun (advocate ) and came to be used as a stem on which a verb could be formed (separate; advocate; agitate ). In English the use as a verbal suffix has been extended to stems of non-Latin origin: calibrate; acierate .
ate
1 Americanverb
noun
suffix
-
(forming adjectives) possessing; having the appearance or characteristics of
fortunate
palmate
Latinate
-
(forming nouns) a chemical compound, esp a salt or ester of an acid
carbonate
stearate
-
(forming nouns) the product of a process
condensate
-
forming verbs from nouns and adjectives
hyphenate
rusticate
suffix
noun
verb
Etymology
Origin of Ate2
< Greek, special use of átē reckless impulse, ruin, akin to aáein to mislead, harm
Origin of ATE3
a(utomatic) t(est) e(quipment)
Origin of -ate4
< Latin -ātus (masculine), -āta (feminine), -ātum (neuter), equivalent to -ā- thematic vowel + -tus, -ta, -tum past participle suffix
Origin of -ate5
Probably originally in New Latin phrases, as plumbum acetātum salt produced by the action of acetic acid on lead
Origin of -ate6
< Latin -ātus (genitive -ātūs ), generalized from v. derivatives, as augurātus office of an augur ( augurā(re) to foretell by augury + -tus suffix of v. action), construed as derivative of augur augur 1
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.
At one point father and baby ate grass together, the big grass fronds flickering around their heads as they chomped.
From Slate • May 27, 2026
This was as a result of feral goats who ate every tree seedling which then prevented the forest from regenerating.
From BBC • May 25, 2026
Walmart said higher fuel prices increased the value of its inventory and ate into profits as transportation costs to stock stores and delivery online orders rose.
From The Wall Street Journal • May 21, 2026
He immediately set about trying to shore up the economy by scrapping fuel subsidies that ate into the country's dollar reserves, but acute fuel shortages remain and inflation has rocketed.
From Barron's • May 20, 2026
He’d pretend to get mad that I ate his candy again, and I’d giggle and deny it, my tongue raw and tingly from too much sugar.
From "Red Flags and Butterflies" by Sheryl Azzam
![]()
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.