The difference between Acre and Juger
When used as nouns, acre means an english unit of land area (symbol: a. or 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, whereas juger means a roman unit of area, equivalent to 2 acti or 28,800 square feet (about ¼ha).
check bellow for the other definitions of Acre and Juger
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Acre as a noun:
An English unit of land area (symbol: a. or 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.
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Acre as a noun:
Any of various similar units of area in other systems.
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Acre as a noun (informal, usually plural):
A wide expanse.
Examples:
"I like my new house - there’s acres of space!"
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Acre as a noun (informal, usually plural):
A large quantity.
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Acre as a noun (obsolete):
A field.
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Acre as a noun (obsolete):
The acre's breadth by the length, English units of length equal to the statute dimensions of the acre: 22 yds (≈20 m) by 220 yds (≈200 m).
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Acre as a noun (obsolete):
A duel fought between individual Scots and Englishmen in the borderlands.
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Juger as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):
A Roman unit of area, equivalent to 2 acti or 28,800 square feet (about ¼ha).