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Gate Very Common

Gate has 12 different meanings across 3 categories:

Noun · Verb · Proper Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

a movable barrier in a fence or wall

"The farmer quickly closed the wooden gate to keep the sheep from wandering into the road."

2

a computer circuit with several inputs but only one output that can be activated by particular combinations of inputs

"The programmer debugged the gate to ensure it produced a high signal only when both temperature and pressure sensors triggered simultaneously."

3

total admission receipts at a sports event

"The team celebrated after their latest game, where they smashed the previous season's gate record by twenty percent."

4

passageway (as in an air terminal) where passengers can embark or disembark

"After collecting our luggage, we walked through the gate to board our connecting flight."

5

A doorlike structure outside a house.

"After scoring high on the entrance exam, Sarah was placed through the gate for gifted and talented programs at her new school."

6

A way, path.

7

gifted and talented education

In plain English: A gate is a hinged barrier that you can open and close to control who or what passes through an opening.

"The heavy iron gate at the entrance to the park was locked for the night."

Usage: Use "gate" to refer specifically to a barrier or entrance in a wall or fence, not simply any path or way through an area. For general paths or passages, choose words like "passage," "corridor," or "way.

Verb
1

supply with a gate

"The house was gated"

2

control with a valve or other device that functions like a gate

"The engineer adjusted the flow meter to regulate the water pressure through the gated pipe."

3

restrict (school boys') movement to the dormitory or campus as a means of punishment

"The principal decided to gate the misbehaving students inside their dorms until they apologized to the affected families."

4

To keep something inside by means of a closed gate.

"The farmer quickly shut the wooden gate to keep the stray sheep from wandering onto the highway."

In plain English: To gate means to close a door or entrance so that people cannot pass through it.

"The crowd began to gate the stadium at dusk."

Usage: As a verb, to gate means to secure or enclose an area using a physical barrier like a fence or door. You would use this word when describing the act of closing a mechanism to prevent entry or exit, such as gating livestock into a pen.

Proper Noun
1

A ghost town in Scott County, Arkansas, United States.

"The old water tower at Gate still stands as a reminder of the mining days that once sustained the small community."

Example Sentences
"The heavy iron gate at the entrance to the park was locked for the night." noun
"The crowd began to gate the stadium at dusk." verb
"The security team will gate access to the parking lot at midnight." verb
"We had to gate in our dog before leaving for the hike." verb
"Don't forget to gate your guests out after the party ends." verb
See Also
fence door opening fence opening entrance bridge fence door or
Related Terms
fence door opening fence opening entrance bridge fence door or open gatelike aboideau medium scale integration sluice stall handler cast terminal mechanism nexion postern doorway
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
movable barrier computer circuit gross passageway supply operate restrict
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
head gate lock-gate lychgate portcullis postern tailgate tail gate tollgate turnpike turnstile wicket AND circuit NAND circuit OR circuit X-OR circuit arrival gate departure gate

Origin

The word "gate" comes from the Old English term for a hole or opening. It traveled into modern English through Middle English while retaining its original meaning of an entranceway.

Rhyming Words
ate bate late kate date wate cate rate nate oate sate tate jate hate mate fate yate agate skate blate
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