1. abbate - Noun
2. Abbate - Proper noun
An Italian abbot, or similar clergyman in minor orders
Alternative form of abate (“Italian abbot”)
Abbate (plural Abbates)
A surname from Italian.
“As Director Wray has stressed, FISA is an indispensable tool to guard against national security threats, but we must ensure that these authorities are carefully exercised and that FISA applications are scrupulously accurate,“ Abbate wrote. Source: Internet
Anthony and Susannah Abbate purchased a decommissioned fire station with grand plans to remodel it, but major maintenance issues took precedence over cosmetic upgrades. Source: Internet
“If too much sand gets into the deposit or debris is picked up along the way, it renders that oil useless,” said Jason Abbate the group lead of production engineering at Cenovus. Source: Internet
Music and Discourse: Toward a Semiology of Music, translated by Carolyn Abbate of Musicologie generale et semiologie. Source: Internet
MIT Press Cambridge Inventing the Internet, J. Abbate (2000) Eventually, Cerf and Kahn agreed that the layers must be split into two and the Transmission Control Program was split into Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet Protocol (IP). Source: Internet
If you’re in Chicago you may have heard yesterday that the cop, Tony Abbate, won’t be serving any time behind bars in the case even though he was convicted of felony aggravated battery. Source: Internet