Words that rhyme with personate

  • arsenate
    n 1: a salt or ester of arsenic acid
  • assassinate
    v 1: murder; especially of socially prominent persons; "Anwar Sadat was assassinated because many people did not like his peace politics with Israel" 2: destroy or damage seriously, as of someone's reputation; "He assassinated his enemy's character"
  • ate
    n 1: goddess of criminal rashness and its punishment
  • decaffeinate
    v 1: remove caffeine from (coffee)
  • dehydrogenate
    v 1: remove hydrogen from [ant: hydrogenate]
  • deoxygenate
    v 1: remove oxygen from (water)
  • fascinate
    v 1: cause to be interested or curious [syn: intrigue, fascinate] 2: to render motionless, as with a fixed stare or by arousing terror or awe; "The snake charmer fascinates the cobra" [syn: fascinate, transfix, grip, spellbind] 3: attract; cause to be enamored; "She captured all the men's hearts" [syn: capture, enamour, trance, catch, becharm, enamor, captivate, beguile, charm, fascinate, bewitch, entrance, enchant]
  • fractionate
    v 1: separate into constituents or fractions containing concentrated constituents 2: obtain by a fractional process
  • hallucinate
    v 1: perceive what is not there; have illusions
  • homogenate
    n 1: material that has been homogenized (especially tissue that has been ground and mixed); "liver homogenate"
  • hydrogenate
    v 1: combine or treat with or expose to hydrogen; add hydrogen to the molecule of (an unsaturated organic compound) [ant: dehydrogenate]
  • hyphenate
    v 1: divide or connect with a hyphen; "hyphenate these words and names" [syn: hyphenate, hyphen]
  • impersonate
    v 1: assume or act the character of; "She impersonates Madonna"; "The actor portrays an elderly, lonely man" [syn: impersonate, portray] 2: represent another person with comic intentions 3: pretend to be someone you are not; sometimes with fraudulent intentions; "She posed as the Czar's daughter" [syn: pose, impersonate, personate]
  • originate
    v 1: come into existence; take on form or shape; "A new religious movement originated in that country"; "a love that sprang up from friendship"; "the idea for the book grew out of a short story"; "An interesting phenomenon uprose" [syn: originate, arise, rise, develop, uprise, spring up, grow] 2: bring into being; "He initiated a new program"; "Start a foundation" [syn: originate, initiate, start] 3: begin a trip at a certain point, as of a plane, train, bus, etc.; "The flight originates in Calcutta"
  • oxygenate
    v 1: impregnate, combine, or supply with oxygen; "oxygenate blood" [syn: oxygenate, oxygenize, oxygenise, aerate]
  • paginate
    v 1: number the pages of a book or manuscript [syn: foliate, paginate, page]
  • ratiocinate
    v 1: reason methodologically and logically
  • rejuvenate
    v 1: cause (a stream or river) to erode, as by an uplift of the land 2: develop youthful topographical features; "the land rejuvenated" 3: make younger or more youthful; "The contact with his grandchildren rejuvenated him" [ant: age] 4: return to life; get or give new life or energy; "The week at the spa restored me" [syn: regenerate, restore, rejuvenate] 5: become young again; "The old man rejuvenated when he became a grandfather"
  • resonate
    v 1: sound with resonance; "The sound resonates well in this theater" [syn: resonate, vibrate] 2: be received or understood [syn: resonate, come across]
  • vaccinate
    v 1: perform vaccinations or produce immunity in by inoculation; "We vaccinate against scarlet fever"; "The nurse vaccinated the children in the school" [syn: immunize, immunise, inoculate, vaccinate]
  • circinate
    adj 1: shaped like a ring [syn: annular, annulate, annulated, circinate, ringed, ring-shaped, doughnut-shaped]
  • lancinate
    adj 1: painful as if caused by a sharp instrument; "a cutting wind"; "keen winds"; "knifelike cold"; "piercing knifelike pains"; "piercing cold"; "piercing criticism"; "a stabbing pain"; "lancinating pain" [syn: cutting, keen, knifelike, piercing, stabbing, lancinate, lancinating]
  • deracinate
    v 1: move (people) forcibly from their homeland into a new and foreign environment; "The war uprooted many people" [syn: uproot, deracinate] 2: pull up by or as if by the roots; "uproot the vine that has spread all over the garden" [syn: uproot, extirpate, deracinate, root out]
  • invaginate
    v 1: sheathe; "The chrysalis is invaginated" 2: fold inwards; "some organs can invaginate" [syn: invaginate, introvert]
  • vaticinate
    v 1: predict or reveal through, or as if through, divine inspiration [syn: prophesy, vaticinate] 2: foretell through or as if through the power of prophecy
  • alginate
  • aydt
  • ait
  • pulvinate
  • succinate
  • sulphonate
  • evaginate
  • exsanguinate
  • repaginate
  • revaccinate
  • uncinate

See also personate definition and personate synonyms