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grating - Master This Word

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grating Word Meanings

  • to shred food into smaller pieces using a tool
  • to cause annoyance or irritation
  • a framework of metal bars
Illustration for this word

grating Example Sentences

Example sentences are the start of understanding. Don't rush to memorize. First feel how the word works in a sentence.

grating Phonetic & Pronunciation

Pronunciation
UK /ɡreɪt/
US /ɡreɪt/
Syllables
grate

grating Word Etymology

grate = grator + -ate (to scrape); Latin 'gratus' meaning 'pleasing'. Imagine a cook grating cheese, envision a shower of white flakes falling onto a dish.

Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.

Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.

Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible Input

Real Context

Grate is a versatile English word with both cooking and irritant senses, plus a concrete noun. As a verb it means to shred food into small pieces using a tool such as a grater, or to irritate someone or something, as a sound or behavior that keeps recurring. As a noun, a grate is a framework of metal bars, found over fireplaces, drains, or grills. The cooking sense derives from the tool used to scrape and shred; etymology links grate to grator-ate and to the Latin gratus meaning pleasing. In daily life you might grate cheese on pasta, grate carrots for a salad, or say a sound grates on you when it becomes too loud.

Usage Reminders

  • Grate is a transitive verb; you grate something (cheese, carrots, chocolate). The noun grate refers to a metal grid (fireplace, drain, grill). The phrase 'grates on someone' means it irritates. Grater is the tool, not grate itself. Don’t confuse with great. Use precise foods when you specify what you are grating.

Common Misconceptions

  • Grate and great are easily confused due to phonetic similarity.
  • Grate only means irritate; it does not apply to all annoyances.
  • Grate is not used to describe the tool itself; use grater for the tool.
  • Grate as a noun is not about a person or concept, but a metal grid.
  • The phrasal use 'grates on' requires a subject that is unpleasant to the senses, not a person.

Thinking Differences

English speakers group grate into cooking and annoyance senses with clear verb-noun separation; avoid translating the noun sense too literally into non-numeric images. Learners often mix up grate with great or misapply the phrasal sense; practice with both cooking and irritant contexts.

Learning Tips

  • Learn the cooking verbs with common foods (cheese, carrots, chocolate).
  • Remember the noun grate as a metal grid (fireplace, drain, grill).
  • Practice the phrasal use 'grates on' with sounds or behaviors.
  • Differentiate grate from grater by focusing on tool vs action.
  • Keep a mini gloss of language-specific translations for each sense.
  • Make quick example sentences to reinforce each meaning.

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