What is the meaning of Gate?

A doorlike structure outside a house.

A doorway, opening, or passage in a fence or wall.

A movable barrier.

A passageway (as in an air terminal) where passengers can embark or disembark.

A location which serves as a conduit for transport, migration, or trade.

The amount of money made by selling tickets to a concert or a sports event.

A logical pathway made up of switches which turn on or off. Examples are and, or, nand, etc.

The controlling terminal of a field effect transistor (FET).

In a lock tumbler, the opening for the stump of the bolt to pass through or into.

The channel or opening through which metal is poured into the mould; the ingate.

The waste piece of metal cast in the opening; a sprue or sullage piece. Also written geat and git.

The gap between a batsman's bat and pad.

A mechanism, in a film camera and projector, that holds each frame momentarily stationary behind the aperture.

A line that separates particle type-clusters on two-dimensional dot plots.

A tally mark consisting of four vertical bars crossed by a diagonal, representing a count of five.

An individual theme park as part of a larger resort complex with multiple parks.

A place where drugs are illegally sold.

A man; a male person.

A tunnel serving the coal face.

To keep something inside by means of a closed gate.

To punish (especially a child or teenager) by not allowing to go out.

To open (a closed ion channel).

To furnish with a gate.

To turn (an image intensifier) on and off selectively, as needed or to avoid damage from excessive light exposure. See autogating.

To selectively regulate or restrict (access to something).

A way, path.

A journey.

A street; now used especially as a combining form to make the name of a street e.g. "Briggate" (a common street name in the north of England meaning "Bridge Street") or Kirkgate meaning "Church Street".

Manner; gait.

plural of gat

head

spoil

gate

entrance door

darling, sweetheart

spoilt

stale, expired

to spoil, ruin

An entryway or entrance to a settlement or building; a gateway.

A gate (door barring an entrance or gap in a fence)

A method or way of doing something or getting somewhere.

Any kind of entrance or entryway; e.g. a crossing through mountains.

A way, path or avenue; a trail or route.

A voyage, adventure or leaving; one's course on the road.

The way which one acts; one's mode of behaviour:

  1. A way or procedure for doing something; a method.
  2. A moral or religious path; the course of one's life.
  3. One's lifestyle or demeanour; the way one chooses to act.
  4. Gait; the way one walks.

A way or procedure for doing something; a method.

A moral or religious path; the course of one's life.

One's lifestyle or demeanour; the way one chooses to act.

Gait; the way one walks.

mutated form of ate (liver)

a street

a street

genitive singular of gāt

liver

heart

airport gate

scandal

locative singular masculine/neuter & accusative plural masculine & vocative singular feminine of gata, which is past participle of gacchati (to go)

gate (circuit that implements a logical operation)

mountain

inflection of gatar:

  1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
  2. third-person singular imperative

first/third-person singular present subjunctive

third-person singular imperative

street, way, road, path

vocative singular of gat

Source: wiktionary.org