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, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
Etymology
From Middle English acre , aker , from Old English æcer ( “ field where crops are grown ” ) , from Proto-West Germanic *akr , from Proto-Germanic *akraz ( “ field ” ) , from Proto-Indo-European *h₂éǵros ( “ field ” ) .
Cognate with Scots acre , aker , acker ( “ acre, field, arable land ” ) , North Frisian ecir ( “ field, a measure of land ” ) , West Frisian eker ( “ field ” ) , Dutch akker ( “ field ” ) , German Acker ( “ field, acre ” ) , Norwegian åker ( “ field ” ) and Swedish åker ( “ field ” ) , Icelandic akur ( “ field ” ) , Latin ager ( “ land, field, acre, countryside ” ) , Ancient Greek ἀγρός ( agrós , “ field ” ) , Sanskrit अज्र ( ájra , “ field, plain ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
acre (plural acres or ( UK colloquial ) acre )
An English unit of land area (symbol : a. or ac. ) originally denoting a day 's ploughing for a yoke of oxen , now standardized as 4,840 square yards or 4,046.86 square metres .
2006 , Edwin Black , chapter 2, in Internal Combustion :Buried within the Mediterranean littoral are some seventy to ninety million tons of slag from ancient smelting, about a third of it concentrated in Iberia. This ceaseless industrial fueling caused the deforestation of an estimated fifty to seventy million acres of woodlands.
( Chester, historical ) An area of 10,240 square yards or 4 quarters .[ 1]
Any of various similar units of area in other systems .
( informal , usually in the plural ) A wide expanse.
I like my new house—there’s acres of space!
( informal , usually in the plural ) A large quantity.
( obsolete ) A field .
( obsolete ) The acre's breadth by the length , English units of length equal to the statute dimensions of the acre : 22 yd (≈20 m) by 220 yd (≈200 m).
( obsolete ) A duel fought between individual Scots and Englishmen in the borderlands .
Synonyms
( approximate ) : day's math , demath
( Egyptian ) : feddan
( Dutch ) : morgen
( French ) : arpent , arpen , pose
( German ) : Morgen
( India ) : cawney , cawny , bigha
( Ireland ) : Irish acre , collop , plantation acre
( Roman ) : juger , jugerum
( Scottish ) : Scottish acre , Scots acre , Scotch acre , acair
( Wales ) : Welsh acre , cover , cyfair , erw , stang
Hypernyms
(100 carucates, notionally ) See hundred
(the area able to be plowed by 8 oxen in a year ) See carucate
(the area able to be plowed by two oxen in a year ) See virgate
(the area able to be plowed by an ox in a year ) See oxgang
(the area able to be plowed by an ox in half a season ) See nook
(the area able to be plowed by an ox in 1 ⁄ 4 a season ) See fardel
(10 acres, prob. spurious ) acreme
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
unit of surface area
Arabic: آكِر m ( ʔākir )
Bulgarian: а́кър m ( ákǎr )
Burmese: ဧက (my) ( eka. )
Catalan: acre (ca) m
Chinese:
Mandarin: 英畝 / 英亩 (zh) ( yīngmǔ )
Czech: akr (cs) m
Esperanto: akreo (eo)
Estonian: aaker (et)
Faroese: ekra f
Finnish: eekkeri
French: acre (fr) f
Galician: acre (gl) m
Georgian: აკრი ( aḳri )
German: Morgen (de) m , Acker (de) m , Joch (de) n , Joch Landes n , Juchart m or f ( Swiss )
Greek: έικρ n ( éikr )
Hungarian: angol hold
Indonesian: ekar (id)
Irish: acra m
Italian: acro (it) m
Japanese: エーカー (ja) ( ēkā )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: بەرجووت ( bercût )
Malay: ekar
Maori: eka
Navajo: náhásdzo hayázhí dikʼą́
Norman: acre f ( Jersey )
Old English: æcer m
Persian: جریب (fa) ( jerib )
Plautdietsch: Aka m
Polish: akr (pl) m
Portuguese: acre (pt) m , jeira (pt) f
Russian: акр (ru) m ( akr )
Scottish Gaelic: acaire f
Serbo-Croatian: акер m , aker m , jutro (sh) n , ral (sh) m
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: morgen m
Spanish: acre (es) m
Swahili: ekari (sw)
Telugu: ఎకరా (te) ( ekarā ) , ఎకరము (te) ( ekaramu )
Thai: เอเคอร์ (th) ( ee-kə̂ə )
Ukrainian: акр (uk) m ( akr )
Vietnamese: mẫu Anh , mẫu tây (vi)
Volapük: göded (vo)
Welsh: erw (cy) f
Yiddish: אַקער m ( aker )
Yoruba: éékà , sarè
References
Robert Holland, M.R.A.C., A Glossary of Words Used in the County of Chester, Part I--A to F., English Dialect Society, London, 1884, 3
See also
References
^ Robert Holland, M.R.A.C., A Glossary of Words Used in the County of Chester, Part I--A to F., English Dialect Society, London, 1884, 2
Anagrams
acer , race- , -care , Cera , Care , care , caer , Race , e-car , CERA , Crea , race
French
Etymology
Probably from Old Norse akr reenforced by Old English æcer ( “ a field, land, that which is sown, sown land, cultivated land; a definite quantity of land, land which a yoke of oxen could plough in a day, an acre, a certain quantity of land, strip of plough-land; crop ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
acre f (plural acres )
( historical ) acre
Further reading
Anagrams
Italian
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Latin ācrem . Doublet of agro .
Adjective
acre (plural acri , superlative acerrimo )
sharp , sour
Synonyms: acido , agro , aspro
Synonyms: amabile , dolce
( by extension ) :
penetrating ( of a smell )
Synonym: pungente
shrill ( of a sound )
Synonym: stridente
harsh , malevolent
Synonyms: acido , aspro
Synonyms: amabile , dolce
Derived terms
Further reading
acre in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line , Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Noun
acre f pl
plural of acra
Anagrams
Latin
Pronunciation
Adjective
ācre
neuter nominative / accusative / vocative singular of ācer
References
“acre ”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879 ) A Latin Dictionary , Oxford: Clarendon Press
acre in Gaffiot, Félix (1934 ) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français , Hachette.
“acre ”, in Richard Stillwell et al., editor (1976 ), The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites , Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press
Middle English
Etymology 1
Noun
acre
Alternative form of acorn
Etymology 2
Noun
acre
Alternative form of aker
Norman
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium .)
Noun
acre f (plural acres )
( Jersey ) acre
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
Borrowed from English acre . Doublet of åker .
Pronunciation
Noun
acre m (definite singular acren , indefinite plural acre or acres , definite plural acrene )
an acre ( an English unit of land area (symbol : ac. ) originally denoting a day 's plowing for a yoke of oxen , now standardized as 4,840 square yards or 4,046.86 square meters )
1920 , Jonas Lie , Samlede Digterverker IV , page 288 :han havde kjøbt de 125,000 acres land af et kompani eller rettere en bande af svindlere he had bought the 125,000 acres of land from a company or rather a gang of scammers
1936 , Knut Hamsun , Ringen sluttet I , page 85 :liten elendig farm, firti acres small miserable farm, forty acres
1987 , Richard Herrmann , Victoria , page 168 : dekket et område på 26 acres, som skulle bli over hundre norske mål covered an area of 26 acres, which was to be over a hundred Norwegian acres
References
“acre” in The Bokmål Dictionary .
“acre” in Det Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB ).
“acre ” in Store norske leksikon
Anagrams
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
Borrowed from English acre . Doublet of åker .
Pronunciation
Noun
acre m (plural acren )
an acre ( an English unit of land area (symbol : ac. ) originally denoting a day 's plowing for a yoke of oxen , now standardized as 4,840 square yards or 4,046.86 square meters )
References
“acre” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
Old Irish
Noun
acre n
Alternative spelling of acrae
Mutation
Mutation of acre
radical
lenition
nasalization
acre ( pronounced with /h/ in h -prothesis environments )
unchanged
n-acre
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Old Irish. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
Portuguese
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Latin ācrem . Doublet of agre , agro , and ágrio .
Adjective
acre m or f (plural acres )
sharp ( unpleasantly acrid or tart in taste )
Etymology 2
Borrowed from English acre . Doublet of agro .
Noun
acre m (plural acres )
( measure ) English or American acre , a unit of area about equal to 0.4 hectares
Coordinate terms
geira ( traditional Portuguese equivalent )
Romanian
Pronunciation
Adjective
acre
feminine / neuter plural nominative / accusative of acru
Scots
Etymology
From Middle English aker , from Old English æcer ( “ field; acre ” ) , from Proto-West Germanic *akr .
Pronunciation
Noun
acre (plural acres )
An acre ( unit of measurement ) .
As a lineal measure.
piece of ground .
Usage notes
The plural is acre when following a numeral.
Descendants
Verb
acre (present participle acrin' )
To let grain crops be harvested at a stated sum per acre.
To be employed in harvesting grain crops at a stated sum per acre.
Derived terms
References
Spanish
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Latin ācrem .
Adjective
acre m or f (masculine and feminine plural acres )
bitter ; acrid ; pungent
caustic
Synonyms: cáustico , mordaz
Derived terms
Etymology 2
Borrowed from English acre . Doublet of agro .
Noun
acre m (plural acres )
English or American acre
Further reading
Anagrams