hate

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. An object of hatred.
  2. Hatred.
  3. Negative feedback, abusive behaviour.
  4. Bigotry.
verb
  1. To dislike intensely or greatly.
  2. To experience a feeling of hatred.
  3. Used in a phrasal verb: hate on.

Pronunciation

[heʔ] hāt /heɪt/ [hɛɪ̯(ʔ)t̚] [he̞ɪ̯(ʔ)t̚] [heː(ʔ)t̚] [heːt] /hæɪ̯t/ [hɛjt] LL-Q1860 (eng)-Back ache-hate.wav En-us-hate.ogg LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-hate.wav

Word forms

hate hates hating hated no-table-tags glossary hatest hatedst hateth

Etymology

From Middle English hate (noun), probably from Old English hatian (“to hate”, verb) and/or Old Norse hatr (“hate”, noun). Merged with Middle English hete, hæte, heate (“hate”), from Old English hete, from Proto-Germanic *hataz (“hatred, hate”), from Proto-Indo-European *keh₂d- (“strong emotion”). Cognate with Dutch haat (“hatred”), German Hass, Haß (“hate, hatred”), Luxembourgish Haass (“hate, hatred”), Vilamovian hās (“hate, hatred”), Yiddish האַס (has, “hatred”), Danish had (“hate, hatred”), Faroese and Icelandic hatur (“hatred, spite, aversion”), Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, and Swedish hat (“hate, hatred”), Gothic 𐌷𐌰𐍄𐌹𐍃 (hatis, “hate, wrath”). The verb is from Middle English haten, from Old English hatian (“to hate, treat as an enemy”), from Proto-West Germanic *hatēn, from Proto-Germanic *hatāną (“to hate”), from Proto-Germanic *hataz, from the same root as above.

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