See also: châté and chatę

English edit

Verb edit

chate (third-person singular simple present chates, present participle chating, simple past and past participle chated)

  1. (Scotland) To cheat.
    • 1899, Horatio Alger, Jr., Paul the Peddler[1]:
      "You want to chate me!" said Teddy, angrily.
    • 1875, Horatio Alger, The Young Outlaw[2]:
      I'm up to your tricks, you young spalpeen, thryin' to chate a poor widder out of her money."
    • 1866, Oliver Optic, Hope and Have[3]:
      "But ye better beg than chate me out of me honest dues.
    • 1873, Various, The World's Greatest Books, Vol VI.[4]:
      But they'll murdher my boy when they find out the chate," said Mrs. Rooney. "

Noun edit

chate (plural chates)

  1. (Scotland) Cheat.
    • 1885, Grace Greenwood, Stories and Legends of Travel and History, for Children[5]:
      With that, he began to swear and call me a chate, and threaten me with the police.
    • 1865, Thomas Mayne Reid, The Ocean Waifs[6]:
      That there's been chatin' yez are all agreed; only yez can't identify the chate.

Anagrams edit

Old French edit

Noun edit

chate oblique singularf (oblique plural chates, nominative singular chate, nominative plural chates)

  1. female equivalent of chat (cat)

Descendants edit

  • Middle French: chatte
  • Walloon: cate, tchete

References edit

  • Godefroy, Frédéric, Dictionnaire de l’ancienne langue française et de tous ses dialectes du IXe au XVe siècle (1881) (chate, supplement)