MA・TEの英語
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MA・TEの |
研究社 新英和中辞典での「MA・TE」の英訳 |
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mate1
mate2
maté
軍事のほかの用語一覧
ハイパー英語辞書での「MA・TE」の英訳 |
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mate
| 用例 |
| 印欧語根 | ||
|---|---|---|
| mad- | 湿る、湿潤な、濡れることを表す。 (例casemate,myna,musth,meat,mate,muesli)。 | |
| 接尾辞 | ||
|---|---|---|
| -ate | 次の意を表す動詞語尾 1「…させる、…する…になる」 2『化学・医学』「…を加える、…で処理する」 | |
mate
| 用例 |
| 印欧語根 | ||
|---|---|---|
| mad- | 湿る、湿潤な、濡れることを表す。 (例casemate,myna,musth,meat,mate,muesli)。 | |
| 接尾辞 | ||
|---|---|---|
| -ate | 次の意を表す動詞語尾 1「…させる、…する…になる」 2『化学・医学』「…を加える、…で処理する」 | |
mate
| 用例 | workmates / teammates / playmates / classmates |
| 印欧語根 | ||
|---|---|---|
| mad- | 湿る、湿潤な、濡れることを表す。 (例casemate,myna,musth,meat,mate,muesli)。 | |
mate
日本語WordNet(英和)での「MA・TE」の英訳 |
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mate
相手のキングが、逃げられず、また防げないような攻撃となる一手
(a chess move constituting an inescapable and indefensible attack on the opponent's king)
(a fellow member of a team)
Wiktionary英語版での「MA・TE」の英訳 |
-mate
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/02/09 21:46 UTC 版)
接尾辞
派生語
Further reading
- “-mate”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.
mate
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/13 02:24 UTC 版)
発音
語源 1
From 中期英語 mate, a borrowing from Middle Low German mate (“messmate”) (replacing 中期英語 mett, mette (“table companion, mate, partner”), from 古期英語 ġemetta (“sharer of food, table-guest”)), from Old Saxon gimato, derived from Proto-Germanic *gamatjô, itself from *ga- (“together”) (related to German and Dutch ge-) + *matjô (from *matiz (“food”)), related to 古期英語 mete (“food”)). From the same Middle Low German source stems German Low German Maat (“journeyman, companion”), German Maat (“naval non-commissioned officer”). Cognates include Saterland Frisian Moat (“friend, buddy, comrade, mate”), Dutch maat (“mate, partner, colleague, friend”). More at 古期英語 ġe-, English co-, English meat. Doublet of maat.
Compare typologically Latin compāniō (whence companion) (< con- + panis + -ō), Russian однока́шник (odnokášnik) (< одно- (odno-) + ка́ша (káša) + -ник (-nik)).
名詞
- A fellow, comrade, colleague, partner or someone with whom something is shared, e.g. shipmate, classmate.
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1887, Harriet W. Daly, Digging, Squatting, and Pioneering Life in the Northern Territory of South Australia, page 152:
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- (especially of a non-human animal) A breeding partner.
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2015 April 16, Richard P. Grant, “Sex and the successful fundraiser”, in The Guardian:
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- (colloquial, British, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa, sometimes elsewhere in the Commonwealth) A friend, usually of the same sex.
- (colloquial, British, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa, sometimes elsewhere in the Commonwealth) Friendly term of address to a stranger, usually male, of similar age.
- Synonym: buddy
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Excuse me, mate, have you got the time?
- (nautical) In naval ranks, a non-commissioned officer or his subordinate (e.g. Boatswain's Mate, Gunner's Mate, Sailmaker's Mate, etc).
- (nautical) A ship's officer, subordinate to the master on a commercial ship.
- (nautical) A first mate.
- A technical assistant in certain trades (e.g. gasfitter's mate, plumber's mate); sometimes an apprentice.
- The other member of a matched pair of objects.
- A suitable companion; a match; an equal.
使用する際の注意点
- In British and Irish English, mate remains more masculine‐leaning, though it is increasingly used as a gender‐neutral term among younger generations and in urban centres. In Australian and New Zealand English, while it was originally strictly masculine, it has broadened in recent decades to become a common unisex term of address, even when speaking to strangers.
- The colloquial sense of a friend or comrade developed from the lateral use of terms like messmate and shipmate among sailors and laborers of equal rank. In the homosocial maritime and working‐class environments of the 15th to 19th centuries, this fostered a strong connotation of egalitarianism and male solidarity. In colonial Australia and New Zealand, the term also denoted an equal partner in a joint enterprise, especially on the goldfields (a role filled by partner in North American English). The shift toward a unisex application is a relatively modern sociolinguistic development.
- In North America, this colloquial sense is rarely used natively and is strongly associated with British or Australasian speech. Instead, North American English relies on terms such as buddy, pal, or dude. In the US and Canada, mate is generally restricted to its biological sense (a breeding partner) or its formal nautical sense (as in first mate).
下位語
- aerographer's mate
- bandmate
- batchmate
- battery mate
- bedmate
- birthmate
- blockmate
- boat mate
- boatswain's mate
- bookmate
- boothmate
- brinkmate
- bunkermate
- bunkmate
- cagemate
- campmate
- carmate
- cavemate
- cellmate
- chairmate
- chambermate
- chatmate
- checkmate
- chief mate
- choirmate
- churchmate
- clan mate
- classmate
- Claymate
- clonemate
- clutchmate
- copemate
- copesmate
- coursemate
- cradlemate
- crashmate
- crèchemate
- crewmate
- cribmate
- cubemate
- deskmate
- draftmate
- dreammate
- first mate
- flatmate
- fleetmate
- floormate
- fuckmate
- gangmate
- gaolmate
- guildmate
- hallmate
- housemate
- jailmate
- jobmate
- kennelmate
- labmate
- library mate
- linemate
- littermate
- loftmate
- Lolli's mate
- lovemate
- lunchmate
- messmate
- mismate
- nestmate
- office mate
- old mate
- pewmate
- platoonmate
- playmate
- premate
- prisonmate
- raftmate
- reflexmate
- roommate
- roostmate
- ropemate
- rowmate
- running mate
- schoolmate
- seatmate
- selfmate
- sharemate
- sheltermate
- shiftmate
- shipmate
- sitemate
- skainsmate
- soulmate
- squadmate
- squadronmate
- stablemate
- stalemate
- steersmate
- studiomate
- suitemate
- taskmate
- teammate
- tentmate
- threatmate
- tombmate
- tourmate
- townmate
- trencher mate
- tribemate
- tripmate
- wardmate
- warmate
- watchmate
- wingmate
- wombmate
- workmate
- yokemate
派生語
動詞
mate (third-person singular simple present mates, present participle mating, simple past and past participle mated)
- (intransitive) To match, fit together without space between.
- (intransitive) To copulate.
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1913, Edgar Rice Burroughs, The Return of Tarzan, New York: Ballantine Books, published 1963, page 172:
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“In fact, the apes live with us, and have for many ages. We call them the first men—we speak their language quite as much as we do our own; only in the rituals of the temple do we make any attempt to retain our mother tongue. In time it will be forgotten, and we will speak only the language of the apes; in time we will no longer banish those of our people who mate with apes, and so in time we shall descend to the very beasts from which ages ago our progenitors may have sprung.”
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- (intransitive) To pair in order to raise offspring.
- (transitive) To arrange in matched pairs.
- (transitive) To introduce (animals) together for the purpose of breeding.
- (transitive, of an animal) To copulate with.
- (transitive) To marry; to match (a person).
- (transitive, obsolete) To match oneself against; to oppose as equal; to compete with.
- (transitive) To fit (objects) together without space between.
- (intransitive) To come together as companions, comrades, partners, etc.
- (transitive, aerospace) To move (a space shuttle orbiter) onto the back of an aircraft that can carry it.
- Antonym: demate
派生語
語源 2
From 中期英語 verb maten, from Middle French mater, from Old French noun mat (“checkmate”), from Persian شاه مات (šâh mât).
派生語
- Arabian mate
- back-rank mate
- Blind Swine Mate
- Boden's mate
- check and mate
- Cozio's mate
- David and Goliath mate
- epaulet mate
- epaulette mate
- fool's mate
- ladder mate
- scholar's mate
- school mate
- smothered mate
- smother mate
- soul mate
- suffocation mate
動詞
mate (third-person singular simple present mates, present participle mating, simple past and past participle mated)
語源 3
From 中期英語 maten (“to overpower”), from Old French mater (“to kill”), from Vulgar Latin *mattō, of unclear origin.
動詞
mate (third-person singular simple present mates, present participle mating, simple past and past participle mated)
名詞
- Alternative spelling of maté, an aromatic tea-like drink prepared from the holly yerba maté (Ilex paraguariensis).
- The abovementioned plant; the leaves and shoots used for the tea
語源 1
From Middle Low German mate (“messmate”), from Old Saxon gimato, from Proto-West Germanic *gamatjō. Doublet of mette.
The Middle Low German term was introduced to England via the cross‐cultural commercial networks of the Hanseatic League. Originally adopted as professional maritime and merchant jargon for a shipmate or trading partner, its prestige in the North Sea trade eventually caused it to displace the native doublet mette (“table companion”).
別の表記
- mat, mayte
語源 2
語源 3
語源 4
語源 5
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