• Acre

    Pronunciation

    • UK enPR: āʹkÉ™, IPA: /ˈeɪ.kÉ™/
    • US enPR: āʹkÉ™r, IPA: /ˈeɪ.kÉš/
    • Rhymes: -eɪkÉ™(r)

    Alternative forms

    Origin

    From Middle English acre, aker, from Old English æcer ("a field, land, that which is sown, sown land, cultivated land; a definite quantitiy 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"), 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"), Swedish åker ("field"), Icelandic akur ("field"), Latin ager ("land, field, acre, countryside"), Ancient Greek ἀγρός (agros, "field"). Related also to acorn.

    Full definition of acre

    Noun

    acre

    (plural acres)
    1. (obsolete) A field.
    2. A unit of surface area (symbol a. or ac.), originally as much as a yoke of oxen could plough in a day; later defined as an area 1 chain (22 yd) by 1 furlong (220 yd), or 4,840 square yards. Equivalent to about 4,046.86 square metres.
      • 2006, w, Internal Combustion Chapter 2, 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.
    3. (in the plural, informal) A large amount (of area).I like my new house - there’s acres of space!

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