collocate

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See also: colocate

English

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Latin collocatum, supine of collocō. Doublet of couch.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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collocate (third-person singular simple present collocates, present participle collocating, simple past and past participle collocated)

  1. (linguistics, translation studies) (said of certain words) To be often used together, form a collocation; for example strong collocates with tea.
  2. To arrange or occur side by side. (Can we add an example for this sense?)
  3. (obsolete, transitive) To set or place or station in the same place as something else
    • 1548, Edward Hall, The Union of the Two Noble and Illustre Families of Lancastre and Yorke:
      to marſhall and collocate in order his battayles
    • 1600s, Cornelius a Lapide, Commentaries in Sacred Scripture,Tomus IX, p.35:
      that S. Peter will have transferred from his episcopate of Antioch to Rome, and in Rome the Church with the episcopate, the primacy likewise itself, and himself the rock of faith and the Church to have been constituted and collocated

Derived terms

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Translations

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Noun

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collocate (plural collocates)

  1. (linguistics) A component word of a collocation; a word that collocates with another.
    • 2018, Clarence Green, James Lambert, “Advancing disciplinary literacy through English for academic purposes: Discipline-specific wordlists, collocations and word families for eight secondary subjects”, in Journal of English for Academic Purposes, volume 35, →DOI, page 109:
      A list of collocations to accompany the SVL words providing their important lexico-grammatical associations could therefore be a useful supplementary resource. Thus, we took an extra step not present in previously developed academic wordlists and created lists of each word's discipline-specific collocates.

Adjective

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collocate (not comparable)

  1. (obsolete) Set; placed.
    • 1631, Francis [Bacon], “X. Century.”, in Sylua Syluarum: Or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centuries. [], 3rd edition, London: [] William Rawley; [p]rinted by J[ohn] H[aviland] for William Lee [], →OCLC:
      of that creature you must take the parts wherein that virtue chiefly is collocate

Italian

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Etymology 1

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Verb

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collocate

  1. inflection of collocare:
    1. second-person plural present indicative
    2. second-person plural imperative

Etymology 2

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Participle

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collocate f pl

  1. feminine plural of collocato

Latin

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Verb

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collocāte

  1. second-person plural present active imperative of collocō