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Rhymes with hate

hate
H h

Two-syllable rhymes

  • wall plate — Also called raising plate. Building Trades. a horizontal member built into or laid along the top of a wall to support and distribute the pressure from joists, rafters, etc.
  • abate — If something bad or undesirable abates, it becomes much less strong or severe.
  • au fait — If you are au fait with something, you are familiar with it and know about it.
  • await — If you await someone or something, you wait for them.
  • bank rate — The bank rate is the rate of interest at which a bank lends money, especially the minimum rate of interest that banks are allowed to charge, which is decided from time to time by the country's central bank.
  • baud rate — a rate of data transmission measured in baud
  • bay state — Massachusetts
  • berate — If you berate someone, you speak to them angrily about something they have done wrong.
  • birth rate — The birth rate in a place is the number of babies born there for every 1000 people during a particular period of time.
  • blind date — A blind date is an arrangement made for you to spend a romantic evening with someone you have never met before.
  • charge plate — an identification plate, especially one from which an impression can be taken, issued to a customer and used to make purchases on a credit basis.
  • clean slate — a record without dishonour
  • coate — Obsolete form of coat.
  • collate — When you collate pieces of information, you gather them all together and examine them.
  • conflate — If you conflate two or more descriptions or ideas, or if they conflate, you combine them in order to produce a single one.
  • create — To create something means to cause it to happen or exist.
  • cut rate — a price, fare, or rate below the standard charge.
  • debate — A debate is a discussion about a subject on which people have different views.
  • deflate — If you deflate someone or something, you take away their confidence or make them seem less important.
  • dictate — If you dictate something, you say or read it aloud for someone else to write down.
  • dilate — to make wider or larger; cause to expand.
  • elate — Make (someone) ecstatically happy.
  • equate — Consider (one thing ) to be the same as or equivalent to another.
  • estate — An area or amount of land or property, in particular.
  • first mate — the officer of a merchant vessel next in command beneath the captain.
  • first state — Delaware (used as a nickname).
  • free state — U.S. History. (before the Civil War) a state in which slavery was prohibited.
  • gem state — Idaho (used as a nickname).
  • gray skate — a skate, Raja batis, of coastal seas off Great Britain.
  • ground bait — chum2 (def 1).
  • growth rate — increase per unit
  • head gate — a control gate at the upstream end of a canal or lock.
  • heart rate — the number of heartbeats per minute.
  • home plate — the base at which the batter stands and which a base runner must reach safely in order to score a run, typically a five-sided slab of whitened rubber set at ground level at the front corner of the diamond.
  • hot plate — a portable appliance for cooking, formerly heated by a gas burner placed underneath it, now heated chiefly by an electrical unit in the appliance.
  • id est — i.e.: that is
  • inflate — deflate
  • innate — existing in one from birth; inborn; native: innate musical talent.
  • irate — angry; enraged: an irate customer.
  • kuwait — a sovereign monarchy in NE Arabia, on the NW coast of the Persian Gulf: formerly a British protectorate. About 8000 sq. mi. (20,720 sq. km).
  • lightweight — light in weight.
  • misstate — to state wrongly or misleadingly; make a wrong statement about.
  • negate — to deny the existence, evidence, or truth of: an investigation tending to negate any supernatural influences.
  • oblate — flattened at the poles, as a spheroid generated by the revolution of an ellipse about its shorter axis (opposed to prolate).
  • of late — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • or gate — a circuit that is energized when any of its inputs are energized.
  • ornate — elaborately or sumptuously adorned, often excessively or showily so: They bought an ornate Louis XIV sofa.
  • poor rate — a rate or tax levied by parishes for the relief or support of the poor
  • postdate — to date (a check, invoice, letter, document) with a date later than the actual date.
  • predate — to date before the actual time; antedate: He predated the check by three days.
  • prorate — to make an arrangement on a basis of proportional distribution.
  • rain date — an alternative date for an outdoor event in case it is postponed or interrupted by rain.
  • reflate — to increase again the amount of money and credit in circulation.
  • relate — to tell; give an account of (an event, circumstance, etc.).
  • restate — to state again or in a new way.
  • sash weight — a counterweight to a vertically sliding window sash.
  • sedate — calm, quiet, or composed; undisturbed by passion or excitement: a sedate party; a sedate horse.
  • slave state — any state, nation, etc., where slavery is legal or officially condoned.
  • soul mate — a person with whom one has a strong affinity, shared values and tastes, and often a romantic bond: I married my soul mate; you don't get much luckier than that.
  • soup plate — a deep, concave plate used especially for serving soup.
  • speed skate — racing skate.
  • sumgait — a city in SE Azerbaijan, on the Caspian Sea.
  • tax rate — the percentage of the value of a property to be paid as a tax.
  • to date — a particular month, day, and year at which some event happened or will happen: July 4, 1776 was the date of the signing of the Declaration of Independence.
  • translate — to turn from one language into another or from a foreign language into one's own: to translate Spanish.
  • troy weight — a system of weights in use for precious metals and gems (formerly also for bread, grain, etc.): 24 grains = 1 pennyweight (1.555 grams); 20 pennyweights = 1 ounce (31.103 grams); 12 ounces = 1 pound (0.373 kilogram). The grain, ounce, and pound are the same as in apothecaries' weight, the grain alone being the same as in avoirdupois weight. The troy pound is no longer a standard weight in Great Britain.
  • update — to bring (a book, figures, or the like) up to date as by adding new information or making corrections: to update a science textbook.
  • upstate — the part of a state that is farther north or farther from the chief city, especially the northerly part of New York State.

Three-syllable rhymes

  • actuate — If a person is actuated by an emotion, that emotion makes them act in a certain way. If something actuates a device, the device starts working.
  • armor plate — a protective covering of specially hardened steel plates, as on a tank
  • armour plate — a tough heavy steel, usually containing chromium, nickel, and molybdenum and often hardened on the surface, used for protecting warships, tanks, etc
  • badger state — any of various burrowing, carnivorous mammals of the family Mustelidae, as Taxidea taxus, of North America, and Meles meles, of Europe and Asia.
  • beaver state — Oregon (used as a nickname).
  • beehive state — Utah (used as a nickname).
  • bering strait — a strait between Alaska and Russia, connecting the Bering Sea and the Arctic Ocean
  • bluegrass state — Kentucky (used as a nickname).
  • buckeye state — Ohio (used as a nickname).
  • buffer state — A buffer state is a peaceful country situated between two or more larger hostile countries.
  • charles the great — ("Charles the Great") a.d. 742–814, king of the Franks 768–814; as Charles I, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 800–814.
  • chief of state — the titular head of a nation, as a president or king.
  • chinese date — an Old World tree, Ziziphus jujuba, thriving in hot, dry regions.
  • commutate — to reverse the direction of (an electric current)
  • conjugate — When pupils or teachers conjugate a verb, they give its different forms in a particular order.
  • coyote state — South Dakota (used as a nickname).
  • desecrate — If someone desecrates something which is considered to be holy or very special, they deliberately damage or insult it.
  • diamond state — Delaware (used as a nickname).
  • dinner plate — a plate for holding an individual serving of the main course of a meal.
  • discount rate — the rate of interest charged in discounting commercial paper.
  • disinflate — (of an economy) to slow down the rate of inflation.
  • fashion plate — a person who consistently wears the latest style in dress.
  • figure eight — figure eight.
  • figure skate — a shoe skate used in figure skating, especially one having a blade shorter than that of a racing skate, usually not extending beyond the toe or heel, and with notches or sawteeth on the curved forward edge.
  • first estate — the first of the three estates: the clergy in France; the Lords Spiritual in England. Compare estate (def 5).
  • fourth estate — the journalistic profession or its members; the press.
  • garden state — New Jersey (used as a nickname).
  • golden gate — a strait in W California, between San Francisco Bay and the Pacific. 2 miles (3.2 km) wide.
  • golden state — California (used as a nickname).
  • gopher state — Minnesota (used as a nickname).
  • granite state — New Hampshire (used as a nickname).
  • hawkeye state — Iowa (used as a nickname).
  • head of state — the person who holds the highest position in a national government: a meeting of heads of state.
  • hoosier state — Indiana (used as a nickname).
  • interstate — connecting or involving different states: interstate commerce.
  • intrastate — existing or occurring within the boundaries of a state, especially of the United States: intrastate commerce.
  • keystone state — Pennsylvania (used as a nickname).
  • korea strait — a strait between Korea and Japan, connecting the Sea of Japan and the East China Sea. 120 miles (195 km) long.
  • license plate — a plate or tag, usually of metal, bearing evidence of official registration and permission, as for the use of a motor vehicle.
  • lie in wait — to remain inactive or in a state of repose, as until something expected happens (often followed by for, till, or until): to wait for the bus to arrive.
  • life estate — property that may be held only for the extent of the holder's lifetime
  • multistate — of or operating in several states of a nation: a multistate corporation.
  • new york state — New York (def 1).
  • nutmeg state — Connecticut (used as a nickname).
  • old line state — Maryland (used as a nickname).
  • overate — simple past tense of overeat.
  • overrate — to rate or appraise too highly; overestimate: I think you overrate their political influence.
  • overweight — weighing too much or more than is considered normal, proper, etc.: overweight luggage; an overweight patient; two letters that may be overweight.
  • piece of eight — peso (def 4).
  • pine tree state — Maine (used as a nickname).
  • police state — a nation in which the police, especially a secret police, summarily suppresses any social, economic, or political act that conflicts with governmental policy.
  • prairie state — Illinois (used as a nickname).
  • procreate — to beget or generate (offspring).
  • quarter plate — a photographic plate measuring 31⁄4 × 41⁄4 inches (8.3 × 10.8 cm)
  • real estate — property, especially in land: three acres of real estate.
  • recreate — to create anew.
  • reinstate — to put back or establish again, as in a former position or state: to reinstate the ousted chairman.
  • running mate — a candidate for an office linked with another and more important office, as for the vice-presidency.
  • salad plate — a small plate used chiefly for serving an individual portion of salad.
  • section eight — a military discharge for physical or mental unfitness as determined by an Army Regulation in effect from 1922 to 1944.
  • show me state — Missouri (used as a nickname).
  • silver state — Nevada (used as a nickname).
  • solid-state — designating or pertaining to electronic devices, as transistors or crystals, that can control current without the use of moving parts, heated filaments, or vacuum gaps.
  • sooner state — Oklahoma (used as a nickname).
  • starting gate — any of various types of movable barriers for lining up and giving an equal start to the entries in a horse or dog race.
  • sunshine state — Florida (used as a nickname).
  • tar heel state — North Carolina (used as a nickname).
  • third estate — the third of the three estates or political orders: the commons in France or England. Compare estate (def 5).
  • treasure state — Montana (used as a nickname).
  • underrate — to rate or evaluate too low; underestimate.
  • water gate — a gate for halting or controlling the flow of water in a watercourse; floodgate.
  • welfare state — a state in which the welfare of the people in such matters as social security, health and education, housing, and working conditions is the responsibility of the government.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • aloha state — Hawaii (used as a nickname).
  • at any rate — You use at any rate to indicate that what you have just said might be incorrect or unclear in some way, and that you are now being more precise.
  • atomic weight — the weight of one atom of an element expressed in atomic mass units: it is the average weight of all the isotopes of the element
  • centennial state — Colorado (used as a nickname).
  • collection plate — a plate that is used in church to collect money for charity or the support of the church
  • combining weight — the atomic weight of an atom or radical divided by its valence.
  • demodulate — to carry out demodulation on (a wave or signal)
  • figure of eight — figure eight.
  • green mountain state — Vermont (used as a nickname).
  • herod the great — ("the Great") 73?–4 b.c, king of Judea 37–4.
  • interest rate — amount added to money borrowed
  • interrelate — Relate or connect to one another.
  • irish free state — former name of the Republic of Ireland.
  • junior lightweight — a boxer weighing up to 130 pounds (58.5 kg), between featherweight and lightweight.
  • magnolia state — Mississippi (used as a nickname).
  • palmetto state — South Carolina (used as a nickname).
  • pelican state — Louisiana (used as a nickname).
  • recriminate — to bring a countercharge against an accuser.
  • remunerate — to pay, recompense, or reward for work, trouble, etc.
  • second estate — the second of the three estates: the nobles in France; the lords temporal in England. Compare estate (def 5).
  • sunflower state — Kansas (used as a nickname).
  • volunteer state — Tennessee (used as a nickname).
  • wolverine state — Michigan (used as a nickname).

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • catherine the great — (Sophia Augusta of Anhalt-Zerbst"Catherine the Great") 1729–96, empress of Russia 1762–96.
  • circumnavigate — If someone circumnavigates the world or an island, they sail all the way around it.
  • constitution state — Connecticut (used as a nickname).
  • department of state — the department of the U.S. federal government that sets forth and maintains the foreign policy of the U.S., especially in negotiations with foreign governments and international organizations. Abbreviation: DOS.
  • frederick the great — Frederick I (def 2).
  • grand canyon state — Arizona (used as a nickname).
  • molecular weight — the average weight of a molecule of an element or compound measured in units once based on the weight of one hydrogen atom taken as the standard or on 1/16 (0.0625) the weight of an oxygen atom, but after 1961 based on 1/12 (0.083) the weight of the carbon-12 atom; the sum of the atomic weights of all the atoms in a molecule. Abbreviation: mol. wt.
  • mortality rate — number of deaths in a population
  • prime interest rate — prime rate.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • alexander the great — 356–323 bc, king of Macedon, who conquered Greece (336), Egypt (331), and the Persian Empire (328), and founded Alexandria
  • secretary of state — the head and chief administrator of the U.S. Department of State. Compare foreign minister.

Four-or-more syllable rhymes

  • basal metabolic rate — the rate at which heat is produced by the body at rest, 12 to 14 hours after eating, measured in kilocalories per square metre of body surface per hour
  • infant mortality rate — number of babies dying

One-syllable rhymes

  • ate — Ate is the past tense of eat.
  • bait — Bait is food which you put on a hook or in a trap in order to catch fish or animals.
  • bate — (of hawks) to jump violently from a perch or the falconer's fist, often hanging from the leash while struggling to escape
  • cate — a choice bit; dainty
  • crate — A crate is a large box used for transporting or storing things.
  • date — A date is a specific time that can be named, for example a particular day or a particular year.
  • eight — Equivalent to the product of two and four; one more than seven, or two less than ten; 8.
  • est — A system for self-improvement aimed at developing a person's potential through intensive group awareness and training sessions.
  • fait — Misspelling of fate.
  • fate — something that unavoidably befalls a person; fortune; lot: It is always his fate to be left behind.
  • fete — a day of celebration; holiday: The Fourth of July is a great American fete.
  • freight — goods, cargo, or lading transported for pay, whether by water, land, or air.
  • gait — a manner of walking, stepping, or running.
  • gate — Archaic. a path; way.
  • grate — a frame of metal bars for holding fuel when burning, as in a fireplace, furnace, or stove.
  • great — unusually or comparatively large in size or dimensions: A great fire destroyed nearly half the city.
  • kateAdam, 1723–90, Scottish economist.
  • late — occurring, coming, or being after the usual or proper time: late frosts; a late spring.
  • mate — a tealike South American beverage made from the dried leaves of an evergreen tree.
  • pate — porcelain paste used in ceramic work.
  • plait — a braid, especially of hair or straw.
  • plate — the base at which the batter stands and which a base runner must reach safely in order to score a run, typically a five-sided slab of whitened rubber set at ground level at the front corner of the diamond.
  • rate — the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans.
  • sate — to cause to sit; seat (often followed by down): Sit yourself down. He sat me near him.
  • skate — a person; fellow: He's a good skate.
  • slate — a fine-grained rock formed by the metamorphosis of clay, shale, etc., that tends to split along parallel cleavage planes, usually at an angle to the planes of stratification.
  • spate — a sudden, almost overwhelming, outpouring: a spate of angry words.
  • state — the condition of a person or thing, as with respect to circumstances or attributes: a state of health.
  • straight — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • strait — Often, straits. (used with a singular verb) a narrow passage of water connecting two large bodies of water.
  • tateSir Henry, 1819–99, English merchant and philanthropist: founder of an art gallery (Tate Gallery) in London, England.
  • trait — a distinguishing characteristic or quality, especially of one's personal nature: bad traits of character.
  • wait — to remain inactive or in a state of repose, as until something expected happens (often followed by for, till, or until): to wait for the bus to arrive.
  • waite — Morrison Remick [rem-ik] /ˈrɛm ɪk/ (Show IPA), 1816–88, U.S. jurist: chief justice of the U.S. 1874–88.
  • weight — the amount or quantity of heaviness or mass; amount a thing weighs.
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