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From racem(ic) + -ate(suffix denoting a derivative of an element or compound, especially a salt or ester of an acid the name of which ends in -ic).[1]
From race(“contest where the goal is to be the first to reach some objective”) + -mate(suffix forming nouns having the sense of ‘those with whom what is denoted by the nouns are shared’).
1977, Richard Lee Hintz, Factors Influencing Racing Performance of the Standardbred Racer, page 28:
Differences in time at finish, time minus time of winner, and time minus racemate average for various track conditions are given in Tables 15, 16, and 17, respectively.
1981, Virginia Tech Livestock Research Report, page 44:
Many environmental factors, such as track condition or shape, racing strategy or quality of racemates, modify the expression of true speed by a horse in a race and thereby bias performance records.
The interpretation of pace or purse is complicated by the fact that the data reflect not only the performance of the horse but the decisions and behavior of the track officials, the driver, the owner, racemates, etc.
2018, M. Weber, “Rough Start”, in Wild Moments of Sports Car Racing, North Mankato, Minn.: Edge Books, →ISBN, page 15:
A second three-car pileup happened later on. [Scott] Tucker’s racemateGuy Cosmo avoided the accidents.
From race(“group of people distinguished from others on the basis of a common heritage or physical characteristics”) + -mate(suffix forming nouns having the sense of ‘those with whom what is denoted by the nouns are shared’).
1967, Edward V Abner, David W Lewit, “Racial Contact, Personality, and Group Problem Solving”, in Report Resumes, ERIC:
In Figure 1, Negroes and whites alternate around the circle, so that racemates are isolated from one another communicationally. If they communicate, it must be thru a person of the other race.
1994 June 16, “A harmless question”, in alt.skinheads (Usenet):
if you still lay claim to the achievements your ancestors and racemates carried out, you must also share the guilt for their crimes
1996 May 8, “I hate being called "African-American"”, in soc.culture.african.american (Usenet):
I'm 'white' and not so proud of it because of what my 'racemates' have done to the Americans and Africans. :-(
2013 August 14, Evelyn Z. Brodkin, Gregory Marston, Work and the Welfare State: Street-Level Organizations and Workfare Politics (Public Management and Change series), Georgetown University Press, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 275:
She finds an organizational environment with limited prospects for responsiveness and meaningful exchange, even where, theoretically, one might have expected racial and ethnic affinity to produce responsiveness between racemates.