checkmate

[ chek-meyt ]
/ ˈtʃɛkˌmeɪt /

noun

Also called mate. Chess.
  1. an act or instance of maneuvering the opponent's king into a check from which it cannot escape, thus bringing the game to a victorious conclusion.
  2. the position of the pieces when a king is checkmated.
a complete check; defeat: His efforts to escape met with a checkmate.

verb (used with object), check·mat·ed, check·mat·ing.

Chess. to maneuver (an opponent's king) into a check from which it cannot escape; mate.
to check completely; defeat: Napoleon was checkmated at Waterloo.

interjection

Chess. (used by a player to announce that he or she has put the opponent's king into inextricable check.)

Origin of checkmate

1300–50; Middle English chek mat(e) < Middle French escec mat < Arabic shāh māt < Persian: literally, the king (is) checked, nonplussed

OTHER WORDS FROM checkmate

un·check·mat·ed, adjective

Example sentences from the Web for checkmate

British Dictionary definitions for checkmate

checkmate
/ (ˈtʃɛkˌmeɪt) /

noun

chess
  1. the winning position in which an opponent's king is under attack and unable to escape
  2. the move by which this position is achieved
utter defeat

verb (tr)

chess to place (an opponent's king) in checkmate
to thwart or render powerless

interjection

chess a call made when placing an opponent's king in checkmate

Word Origin for checkmate

C14: from Old French eschec mat, from Arabic shāh māt, the king is dead; see check