レート - フリー辞書によるレートの定義
原題: Rate - definition of rate by The Free Dictionary
分析結果
- カテゴリ
- AI
- 重要度
- 54
- トレンドスコア
- 18
- 要約
- レートとは、特定の基準に対する比率や評価を示す用語であり、さまざまな分野で使用される。金融、医療、法律などの文脈で異なる意味を持つことがある。
- キーワード
Rate - definition of rate by The Free Dictionary Rate - definition of rate by The Free Dictionary https://www.thefreedictionary.com/rate Printer Friendly rate Also found in: Thesaurus , Medical , Legal , Financial , Acronyms , Idioms , Encyclopedia , Wikipedia . Related to rate: bank rate , exchange rate , heart rate rate 1 (rāt) n. 1. A quantity measured with respect to another measured quantity: a rate of speed of 60 miles an hour. 2. A measure of a part with respect to a whole; a proportion: the mortality rate; a tax rate. 3. The cost per unit of a commodity or service: postal rates. 4. A charge or payment calculated in relation to a particular sum or quantity: interest rates. 5. Level of quality. 6. often rates Chiefly British A locally assessed property tax. v. rat·ed , rat·ing , rates v. tr. 1. a. To place in a particular class, rank, or grade: rated the film PG13; rated the bonds at junk level. See Synonyms at estimate . b. To specify the performance limits of, especially according to a standard scale: This fuse is rated at 50 amperes. The fishing line is rated for 30 pounds. 2. To regard or consider as having a certain value: rated the movie excellent; rated him a fine cook. 3. Chiefly British To value for purposes of taxation. 4. To set a rate for (goods to be shipped). 5. Informal To merit or deserve: people that rate special treatment; an idea that rates attention. See Synonyms at earn . v. intr. 1. To be ranked in a particular class: a wine that rates higher than any other. 2. Informal To have status, importance, or influence: Tea-flavored ice cream doesn't rate highly in my book. Idiom: at any rate 1. Whatever the case may be; in any case: You should at any rate apologize. 2. Used to indicate a revision or correction to a previous remark: We were delighted, or at any rate satisfied, with the results. [Middle English, from Old French, from Medieval Latin rata , proportion , short for Latin (prō) ratā (parte) , (according to a) fixed (part) , from feminine ablative past participle of rērī , to consider, reckon ; see ar- in Indo-European roots .] rate 2 (rāt) v. rat·ed , rat·ing , rates Archaic v. tr. To berate. v. intr. To express reproof. [Middle English raten , perhaps of Scandinavian origin .] American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved. rate ( reɪt ) n 1. a quantity or amount considered in relation to or measured against another quantity or amount: a rate of 70 miles an hour . 2. (Commerce) a. a price or charge with reference to a standard or scale: rate of interest ; rate of discount . b. ( as modifier ): a rate card . 3. (Commerce) a charge made per unit for a commodity, service, etc 4. See rates 5. the relative speed of progress or change of something variable; pace: he works at a great rate ; the rate of production has doubled . 6. a. relative quality; class or grade b. ( in combination ): first-rate ideas . 7. (Statistics) statistics a measure of the frequency of occurrence of a given event, such as births and deaths, usually expressed as the number of times the event occurs for every thousand of the total population considered 8. (Economics) a wage calculated against a unit of time 9. (Horology) the amount of gain or loss of a timepiece 10. at any rate in any case; at all events; anyway vb ( mainly tr ) 11. ( also intr ) to assign or receive a position on a scale of relative values; rank: he is rated fifth in the world . 12. to estimate the value of; evaluate: we rate your services highly . 13. to be worthy of; deserve: this hotel does not rate four stars . 14. to consider; regard: I rate him among my friends . 15. Brit to assess the value of (property) for the purpose of local taxation 16. slang to think highly of: the clients do not rate the new system . [C15: from Old French, from Medieval Latin rata , from Latin prō ratā parte according to a fixed proportion, from ratus fixed, from rērī to think, decide] rate ( reɪt ) vb ( tr ) to scold or criticize severely; rebuke harshly [C14: perhaps related to Swedish rata to chide] Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014 rate 1 (reɪt) n., v. rat•ed, rat•ing. n. 1. the amount of a charge or payment with reference to some basis of calculation: a high rate of interest on loans. 2. a certain amount of one thing considered in relation to a unit of another thing: at the rate of 60 miles an hour. 3. a fixed charge per unit of quantity: a rate of 10 cents a pound. 4. degree of speed or progress: to work at a rapid rate. 5. assigned position in any of a series of graded classes; rating. 6. the premium charge per unit of insurance. 7. a charge by a common carrier for transportation. 8. a wage paid on a specified time basis: an hourly rate. v.t. 9. to estimate the value or worth of; appraise. 10. to esteem, consider, or account: He is rated a fine writer. 11. to fix at a certain rate, as of charge or payment. 12. to value for purposes of taxation or the like. 13. to make subject to the payment of a certain rate or tax. 14. to place in a certain rank or class, as a ship or a sailor. v.i. 15. to have value or standing: a performance that didn't rate very high. Idioms: at any rate, a. in any event; in any case. b. at least. [1375–1425; late Middle English rate monetary value, estimated amount < Medieval Latin rata < Latin (prō) ratā (parte) (according to) an estimated (part)] rate 2 (reɪt) v.t., v.i. rat•ed, rat•ing. to chide vehemently. [1350–1400; Middle English (a)raten, perhaps < Scandinavian] rat′er, n. Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. rate Past participle: rated Gerund: rating Imperative Present Preterite Present Continuous Present Perfect Past Continuous Past Perfect Future Future Perfect Future Continuous Present Perfect Continuous Future Perfect Continuous Past Perfect Continuous Conditional Past Conditional Imperative rate rate Present I rate you rate he/she/it rates we rate you rate they rate Preterite I rated you rated he/she/it rated we rated you rated they rated Present Continuous I am rating you are rating he/she/it is rating we are rating you are rating they are rating Present Perfect I have rated you have rated he/she/it has rated we have rated you have rated they have rated Past Continuous I was rating you were rating he/she/it was rating we were rating you were rating they were rating Past Perfect I had rated you had rated he/she/it had rated we had rated you had rated they had rated Future I will rate you will rate he/she/it will rate we will rate you will rate they will rate Future Perfect I will have rated you will have rated he/she/it will have rated we will have rated you will have rated they will have rated Future Continuous I will be rating you will be rating he/she/it will be rating we will be rating you will be rating they will be rating Present Perfect Continuous I have been rating you have been rating he/she/it has been rating we have been rating you have been rating they have been rating Future Perfect Continuous I will have been rating you will have been rating he/she/it will have been rating we will have been rating you will have been rating they will have been rating Past Perfect Continuous I had been rating you had been rating he/she/it had been rating we had been rating you had been rating they had been rating Conditional I would rate you would rate he/she/it would rate we would rate you would rate they would rate Past Conditional I would have rated you would have rated he/she/it would have rated we would have rated you would have rated they would have rated Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011 Thesaurus Antonyms Related Words Synonyms Legend: Switch to new thesaurus Noun 1. rate - a magnitude or frequency relative to a time unit; "they traveled at a rate of 55 miles per hour"; "the rate of change was faster than expected" magnitude relation , quantitative relation - a relation between magnitudes acceleration - (physics) a rate of increase of velocity deceleration - (physics) a rate of decrease in velocity attrition rate , rate of attrition - the rate of shrinkage in size or number birth rate , birthrate , fertility , fertility rate , natality - the ratio of live births in an area to the population of that area; expressed per 1000 population per year bits per second , bps - (computer science) the rate at which data is transferred (as by a modem) crime rate - the ratio of crimes in an area to the population of that area; expressed per 1000 population per year data rate - the rate at which circuits or other devices operate when handling digital information death rate , deathrate , fatality rate , mortality rate , mortality - the ratio of deaths in an area to the population of that area; expressed per 1000 per year dose rate - the quantity of radiation absorbed per unit time erythrocyte sedimentation rate , ESR , sed rate , sedimentation rate - the rate at which red blood cells settle out in a tube of blood under standardized conditions; a high rate usually indicates the presence of inflammation flow rate , rate of flow , flow - the amount of fluid that flows in a given time flux - the rate of flow of energy or particles across a given surface frequence , frequency , oftenness - the number of occurrences within a given time period; "the frequency of modulation was 40 cycles per second"; "the frequency of his seizures increased as he grew older" Gc , GHz , gigacycle , gigacycle per second , gigahertz - 1,000,000,000 periods per second growth rate , rate of growth - the rate of increase in size per unit time cycle per second , cycles/second , hertz , Hz , cps , cycle - the unit of frequency; one hertz has a