define gate - Search
  1. Dictionary

    gate
    [ɡāt]
    noun
    gate (noun) · gates (plural noun)
    1. a hinged barrier used to close an opening in a wall, fence, or hedge:
      "she closed the front gate" · "they were opening the gates of their country wide to the enemy"
      • a gateway:
        "she went out through the gate"
      • an exit from an airport building to an aircraft:
        "a departure gate"
      • a mountain pass or other natural passage:
        "the Golden Gate"
    2. the number of people who pay to enter a sports facility, exhibition hall, etc., for any one event:
      "gate receipts"
      • the money taken for admission.
    3. a device resembling a gate in structure or function.
      • a hinged or sliding barrier for controlling the flow of water:
        "a sluice gate"
      • a device for holding each frame of a movie film in position behind the lens of a camera or projector.
      • skiing
        an opening through which a skier must pass in a slalom course, typically marked by upright poles.
    4. an electric circuit with an output which depends on the combination of several inputs:
      "a logic gate"
      • the part of a field-effect transistor to which a signal is applied to control the resistance of the conductive channel of the device.
    verb
    BRITISH ENGLISH
    gate (verb) · gates (third person present) · gated (past tense) · gated (past participle) · gating (present participle)
    1. confine (a student) to school or college:
      "he was gated for the rest of term"
    Origin
    Old English gæt, geat, plural gatu, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch gat ‘gap, hole, breach’.
    gate
    [ɡāt]
    noun
    BRITISH ENGLISH
    gate (noun) · gates (plural noun)
    1. (in place names) a street:
      "Kirkgate"
    Origin
    Middle English (also meaning ‘way’ in general): from Old Norse gata; related to German Gasse ‘street, lane’.
    -gate
    [ɡāt]
    combiningform
    1. in nouns denoting an actual or alleged scandal, especially one involving a cover-up:
      "Irangate"
    Origin
    early 1970s: suggested by the Watergate scandal in the US, 1972.
    and
    [an(d), (ə)n(d)]
    noun
    AND gate (noun)
    1. electronics
      a Boolean operator which gives the value one if and only if all the operands are one, and otherwise has a value of zero.
      • a circuit which produces an output signal only when signals are received simultaneously through all input connections.
    Origin
    Old English and, ond, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch en and German und.
    or
    [ôr]
    noun
    OR gate (noun)
    1. a Boolean operator that gives the value one if at least one operand (or input) has a value of one, and otherwise has a value of zero.
      • electronics
        a circuit that gives an output signal if there is a signal on any of its inputs.
    Origin
    Middle English: a reduced form of the obsolete conjunction other (which superseded Old English oththe ‘or’), of uncertain ultimate origin.
    Translate gate to
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