TOP

Definition of mate verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

mate

verb
 
/meɪt/
 
/meɪt/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they mate
 
/meɪt/
 
/meɪt/
he / she / it mates
 
/meɪts/
 
/meɪts/
past simple mated
 
/ˈmeɪtɪd/
 
/ˈmeɪtɪd/
past participle mated
 
/ˈmeɪtɪd/
 
/ˈmeɪtɪd/
-ing form mating
 
/ˈmeɪtɪŋ/
 
/ˈmeɪtɪŋ/
jump to other results

    animals/birds

  1. [intransitive] mate (with something) (of two animals or birds) to have sex in order to produce young
    • Do foxes ever mate with dogs?
    • After mating, the female kills the male.
    • Females that mate with several males are rare.
    • the sexual signal from the adult female that tells the male she is ready to mate
    see also matingTopics Animalsb2, Birdsb2
  2. [transitive] mate something (to/with something) to put animals or birds together so that they will have sex and produce young
  3. in chess

  4. (also checkmate)
    [transitive] (in chess) to put your opponent in a position in which they cannot prevent their king (= the most important piece) being captured and therefore lose the game
  5. (also checkmate)
    [transitive] to defeat somebody completely
  6. Word Originverb senses 1 to 2 late Middle English: from Middle Low German māt(e) ‘comrade’, of West Germanic origin; related to meat (the underlying concept was of eating together). verb sense 3 Middle English: the noun from Anglo-Norman French mat (from the phrase eschec mat ‘checkmate’); the verb from Anglo-Norman French mater ‘to checkmate’.
See mate in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee mate in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
previously
adverb
 
 
From the Word list
Oxford 3000
B1
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day