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10-letter words that end in rate

  • accelerate — If the process or rate of something accelerates or if something accelerates it, it gets faster and faster.
  • adulterate — If something such as food or drink is adulterated, someone has made its quality worse by adding water or cheaper products to it.
  • advisorate — an advisory body or group
  • aggregrate — Misspelling of aggregate.
  • aglomerate — Misspelling of agglomerate.
  • alliterate — to contain or cause to contain alliteration
  • ameliorate — If someone or something ameliorates a situation, they make it better or easier in some way.
  • asseverate — to assert or declare emphatically or solemnly
  • basic rate — the standard or lowest level on a scale of money payable, esp in taxation
  • biliterate — able to read and write in two languages.
  • biquadrate — the fourth power
  • birostrate — having two beaks or beak-like projections
  • 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.
  • bitartrate — (not in technical usage) a salt or ester of tartaric acid containing the monovalent group -HC4H4O6 or the ion HC4H4O6–
  • calcitrate — (formal, ambitransitive) To kick.
  • camphorate — to apply, treat with, or impregnate with camphor
  • capistrate — (zoology, rare) hooded; cowled.
  • cheap-rate — charged at a lower rate
  • clock rate — (processor, benchmark)   The fundamental rate in cycles per second at which a computer performs its most basic operations such as adding two numbers or transfering a value from one register to another. The clock rate of a computer is normally determined by the frequency of a crystal. The original IBM PC, circa 1981, had a clock rate of 4.77 MHz (almost five million cycles/second). As of 1995, Intel's Pentium chip runs at 100 MHz (100 million cycles/second). The clock rate of a computer is only useful for providing comparisons between computer chips in the same processor family. An IBM PC with an Intel 486 CPU running at 50 MHz will be about twice as fast as one with the same CPU, memory and display running at 25 MHz. However, there are many other factors to consider when comparing different computers. Clock rate should not be used when comparing different computers or different processor families. Rather, some benchmark should be used. Clock rate can be very misleading, since the amount of work different computer chips can do in one cycle varies. For example, RISC CPUs tend to have simpler instructions than CISC CPUs (but higher clock rates) and pipelined processors execute more than one instruction per cycle.
  • clofibrate — a medication used in the treatment of heart disease
  • co-operate — If you co-operate with someone, you work with them or help them for a particular purpose. You can also say that two people co-operate.
  • cogenerate — To generate two forms of energy simultaneously.
  • comiserate — Obsolete spelling of commiserate.
  • consecrate — When a building, place, or object is consecrated, it is officially declared to be holy. When a person is consecrated, they are officially declared to be a bishop.
  • coventrate — To devastate by heavy bombing.
  • cross rate — A cross rate is an exchange rate of two currencies expressed in a third different currency, such as the exchange rate between the euro and the yuan expressed in yen.
  • deaspirate — to remove any audible breath sound from (a sound)
  • death rate — The death rate is the number of people per thousand who die in a particular area during a particular period of time.
  • decay-rate — the reciprocal of the decay time.
  • decelerate — When a vehicle or machine decelerates or when someone in a vehicle decelerates, the speed of the vehicle or machine is reduced.
  • decolorate — to change or fade in colour
  • dedecorate — (obsolete, transitive) To bring to shame; to disgrace.
  • deflagrate — to burn or cause to burn with great heat and light
  • degenerate — If you say that someone or something degenerates, you mean that they become worse in some way, for example weaker, lower in quality, or more dangerous.
  • deliberate — If you do something that is deliberate, you planned or decided to do it beforehand, and so it happens on purpose rather than by chance.
  • desaturate — to cause (a substance) to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance, through solution, chemical combination, or the like.
  • desiderate — to feel the lack of or need for; long for; miss
  • detartrate — To remove tartrates, especially from fruit juices and wines, in order to reduce tartness or sourness.
  • dilacerate — to tear apart or to pieces.
  • duumvirate — a coalition of two persons holding the same office, as in ancient Rome.
  • ecalcarate — having no spur or calcar.
  • edulcorate — to free from acids, salts, or impurities by washing; purify.
  • effigurate — having a definite shape or form
  • electorate — All the people in a country or area who are entitled to vote in an election.
  • elucubrate — To solve, write or compose by working studiously at night; to study.
  • envigorate — Alternative spelling of invigorate.
  • equiparate — equivalent
  • eviscerate — Disembowel (a person or animal).
  • exaggerate — Represent (something) as being larger, greater, better, or worse than it really is.
  • exasperate — Irritate intensely; infuriate.

On this page, we collect all 10-letter words ending in RATE. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 10-letter word that ends in RATE to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.

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