obligate - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

verb
adjective

First attested in 1533; borrowed from Latin obligātus, perfect passive participle of obligō, see -ate (verb-forming suffix). Doublet of oblige, taken through French.

obligate (third-person singular simple present obligates, present participle obligating, simple past and past participle obligated)

  1. (transitive) To bind, compel, constrain, or oblige by a social, legal, or moral tie.
    • 2023 December 27, Richard Foster, “New rail freight terminal leads the way”, in RAIL, number 999, page 39:

      That progress has taken over ten years and £20 million to bring to fruition. But, as Mands explains, the journey has been one that HSG has been almost obligated to undertake. "First and foremost, this is an environmental project," she says.

  2. (transitive, Canada, US, Scotland) To cause to be grateful or indebted; to oblige.
  3. (transitive, Canada, US, Scotland) To commit (money, for example) in order to fulfill an obligation.

In non-legal usage, almost exclusively used in the passive, in form “obligated to X” where ‘X’ is a verb infinitive or noun phrase, as in “obligated to pay”. Further, it is now in standard use only in American English and some dialects such as Scottish,[1] having disappeared from standard British English by the 20th century, being replaced by obliged (it was previously used in the 17th through 19th centuries).[2]

to cause to be grateful or indebted; to oblige

to commit (money, for example) in order to fulfill an obligation

Partly inherited from Middle English obligat(e) (bound (by any obligation), obliged), partly directly borrowed from Latin obligātus, see Etymology 1, -ate (adjective-forming suffix) and -ate (noun-forming suffix) for more.

obligate (comparative more obligate, superlative most obligate)

  1. (biology) Requiring a (specified) way of life, habitat, etc. [from 19th c.]
    • 2018, Tim Flannery, Europe: The First 100 Million Years, Penguin, published 2019, page 171:

      [A]nalysis of the chemical composition of their bones reveals that they were obligate carnivores.

  2. Indispensable; essential; necessary; obligatory; mandatory; unavoidably invoked.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:compulsory
    Antonyms: see Thesaurus:optional

    In addition to being the obligate food source for monarch caterpillars, milkweeds also provide abundant nectar for the adult butterflies.

    In some languages such signaling is optional, whereas in others it is obligate.

    • 2009, C. Kenneth Dodd Jr., Amphibian Ecology and Conservation: A Handbook of Techniques, page 304:

      Aquatic sites constitute obligate habitat for some species, and are critical breeding habitat for species with complex life cycles involving aquatic egg or larval development.

    • 2012, Ulrich Sommer, Plankton Ecology: Succession in Plankton Communities, page 351:

      Unlike for phagotrophic flagellates, bacteria serve as a facultative rather than an obligate food source for crustacean zooplankton.

    • 2013, K.C. Marshall, editor, Advances in Microbial Ecology, volume 11, page 472:

      Light is the obligate energy source for the phototrophic microbes constructing these benthic mats

  3. (obsolete) Bound by oath, law or duty. [up to 17th c.]

Absolutely indispensable; essential

obligate (plural obligates)

  1. (biology) An obligate organism. [from 20th c.]
  1. ^ Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of English Usage, p. 675
  2. ^ The New Fowler’s Modern English Usage (1996)
  • IPA(key): /obliˈɡate/
  • Hyphenation: o‧bli‧ga‧te
  • Rhymes: -ate

obligate

  1. present adverbial passive participle of obligi

obligate

  1. inflection of obligat:
    1. strong/mixed nominative/accusative feminine singular
    2. strong nominative/accusative plural
    3. weak nominative all-gender singular
    4. weak accusative feminine/neuter singular

obligāte

  1. vocative masculine singular of obligātus

obligate

  1. second-person singular voseo imperative of obligar combined with te