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Yard   /jɑrd/   Listen
noun
Yard  n.  
1.
A rod; a stick; a staff. (Obs.) "If men smote it with a yerde."
2.
A branch; a twig. (Obs.) "The bitter frosts with the sleet and rain Destroyed hath the green in every yerd."
3.
A long piece of timber, as a rafter, etc. (Obs.)
4.
A measure of length, equaling three feet, or thirty-six inches, being the standard of English and American measure.
5.
The penis.
6.
(Naut.) A long piece of timber, nearly cylindrical, tapering toward the ends, and designed to support and extend a square sail. A yard is usually hung by the center to the mast.
7.
(Zool.) A place where moose or deer herd together in winter for pasture, protection, etc.
Golden Yard, or Yard and Ell (Astron.), a popular name of the three stars in the belt of Orion.
Under yard (i. e., under the rod), under contract. (Obs.)



Yard  n.  
1.
An inclosure; usually, a small inclosed place in front of, or around, a house or barn; as, a courtyard; a cowyard; a barnyard. "A yard... inclosed all about with sticks In which she had a cock, hight chanticleer."
2.
An inclosure within which any work or business is carried on; as, a dockyard; a shipyard.
Liberty of the yard, a liberty, granted to persons imprisoned for debt, of walking in the yard, or within any other limits prescribed by law, on their giving bond not to go beyond those limits.
Prison yard, an inclosure about a prison, or attached to it.
Yard grass (Bot.), a low-growing grass (Eleusine Indica) having digitate spikes. It is common in dooryards, and like places, especially in the Southern United States. Called also crab grass.
Yard of land. See Yardland.



verb
Yard  v. t.  To confine (cattle) to the yard; to shut up, or keep, in a yard; as, to yard cows.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Yard" Quotes from Famous Books



... 19th at noon came up with the 3 Dutch ships before mentioned. The 29th of November in the morning we saw a small hawk flying about the ship till she was quite tired. Then she rested on the mizzen-topsail-yard, where we caught her. It is probable she was blown off from Madagascar by the violent northerly winds; that being the nighest land to us, though distance near ...
— A Continuation of a Voyage to New Holland • William Dampier

... and good pennyworths at the Golden Dog. Some of the lying cheats of the Friponne talked in my hearing one day about his being a Huguenot. But how can that be, Jean, when he gives the best weight and the longest measure of any merchant in Quebec? Religion is a just yard wand, that ...
— The Golden Dog - Le Chien d'Or • William Kirby

... in the center of the court-yard, where water spouted out from the mouths of carved images, and fell into marble basins below. The ruins of this fountain and of the images remain there still. The den at d was a round pit, like a well, which you could look down into from above: it was about ten feet deep. They ...
— Mary Queen of Scots, Makers of History • Jacob Abbott

... shot, but he was inclined to believe that he had scored a hit somewhere, for he distinctly heard a loud shout that seemed to carry in it a note of alarm. Again, patiently waiting his chance, he fired; and this time he really fancied he saw some chips fly from the mast, close to the sling of the yard, at which point he was persistently aiming. Encouraged by this possible success, and still more by the fact that he was now distinctly overhauling the canoe, Leslie maintained a slow, careful, and ...
— Dick Leslie's Luck - A Story of Shipwreck and Adventure • Harry Collingwood

... arm around her, and drew her to his lap. As she sat there, his great bulk made her seem smaller than she really was. With her hair down and her little red slippers dangling half a yard from the floor, she seemed a child. McEachern, looking at her, found it hard to realize that nineteen years had passed since the moment when the doctor's raised eyebrows had reproved him for his monosyllabic reception of the news that the baby ...
— The Intrusion of Jimmy • P. G. Wodehouse


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