operate

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
9
Words With Friends
10
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/ˈɒpəɹeɪt/
See all 2 pronunciations
/ˈɒpəɹeɪt/ · /ˈɑpəɹeɪt/

Definition of operate

8 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. (intransitive, transitive)To perform a work or labour; to exert power or strength, physical or mechanical; to act.
    “Could someone explain how this meeting operates?”
    “In this town, the garbage removal staff operate between six o'clock at midnight.”
    “The police had inside knowledge of how the gang operated.”
See all 8 definitions

verb

  1. (intransitive, transitive)To perform a work or labour; to exert power or strength, physical or mechanical; to act.
    “Could someone explain how this meeting operates?”
    “In this town, the garbage removal staff operate between six o'clock at midnight.”
    “The police had inside knowledge of how the gang operated.”
  2. (intransitive)To produce an effect.
    “We live our lives in three dimensions for our threescore and ten allotted years. Yet every branch of contemporary science, from statistics to cosmology, alludes to processes that operate on scales outside of human experience: the millisecond and the nanometer, the eon and the light-year.”
  3. (intransitive)To produce an effect.
    “The drug operates by facilitating the negative neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), resulting in the blocking of neural long-term potentiation.”
  4. (intransitive)To produce an effect.
    “The Virtues of private Perſons, how Bright and Exemplary ſoever, operate but on Few; on thoſe only who are near enough to obſerve, and inclin'd to imitate them: their ſphere of Action is narrow, and their Influence is confin'd to it.”
    “A plain, convincing reason operates on the mind both of a learned and ignorant hearer as long as they live.”
  5. (transitive)To bring about as an effect; to cause.
    “Strictures upon style, which are for the most part good, but time has operated a change in many respects even since he wrote.”
    “It is supposed that western Europe was overpopulated and that the crusades operated a beneficial reduction of numbers.”
  6. (intransitive, transitive)To perform some manual act upon a human body in a methodical manner, and usually with instruments, with a view to restore soundness or health, as in amputation, lithotomy, etc.
    “The surgeon had to operate on her heart.”
    “I'm being operated tomorrow.”
  7. (intransitive, transitive)To deal in stocks or any commodity with a view to speculative profits.
  8. (transitive)To put into, or to continue in, operation or activity; to work.
    “to operate a machine”
    “to operate a system”
    “to operate a casino”
    “Termokarstovoye is 250 km east of Tarkosale where Novatek operates a processing facility for its own onshore production.”
    “Now we are liberal with our innermost secrets, spraying them into the public ether with a generosity our forebears could not have imagined. Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don't know and will never meet.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Latin operātus, perfect passive participle of operor (“to work, labor, toil, have effect”), see -ate (verb-forming suffix).

Words you can make from operate

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Best play epater 8 points

6-letter words

3 words

5-letter words

19 words

4-letter words

41 words

3-letter words

44 words

2-letter words

15 words

Hooks

2 extensions · 2 back

A single letter you can add to operate to make another valid word.

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