The difference between Borough and Quarter
When used as nouns, borough means a fortified town, whereas quarter means a quarter-dollar, divided into 25 cents.
Quarter is also verb with the meaning: to divide into quarters.
Quarter is also adjective with the meaning: pertaining to an aspect of a quarter.
check bellow for the other definitions of Borough and Quarter
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Borough as a noun (obsolete):
A fortified town.
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Borough as a noun (rare):
A town or city.
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Borough as a noun:
A town having a municipal corporation and certain traditional rights.
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Borough as a noun:
An administrative district in some cities, e.g., London.
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Borough as a noun:
An administrative unit of a city which, under most circumstances according to state or national law, would be considered a larger or more powerful entity; most commonly used in American English to define the five counties that make up New York City.
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Borough as a noun:
Other similar administrative units in cities and states in various parts of the world.
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Borough as a noun:
A district in Alaska having powers similar to a county.
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Borough as a noun (historical, British, legal):
An association of men who gave pledges or sureties to the king for the good behaviour of each other.
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Borough as a noun (historical, British, legal):
The pledge or surety thus given.
Examples:
"rfquotek Blackstone"
"rfquotek Tomlins"
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Quarter as an adjective:
Pertaining to an aspect of a quarter.
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Quarter as an adjective (chiefly):
Consisting of a fourth part, a quarter (1/4, 25%).
Examples:
"a quarter hour; a quarter century; a quarter note; a quarter pound"
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Quarter as an adjective (chiefly):
Related to a three-month term, a quarter of a year.
Examples:
"A quarter day is one terminating a quarter of the year."
"A quarter session is one held quarterly at the end of a quarter."
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Quarter as a noun (now, _, primarily, financial):
Any fourth of something, particularly: A quarter-dollar, divided into 25 cents; the coin of that value minted in the United States or Canada. A quarter of the year, 3 months; a season. The quarter-ton or tun, divided into 8 bushels, the medieval English unit of volume and weight named by the Magna Carta as the basis for measures of wine, ale, and grain The quarter-yard, divided into 4 nails, an obsolete English unit of length long used in the cloth trade The watch: A quarter of the night, nominally 3 hours but varying over the year. A charge occupying a fourth of a coat of arms, larger than a canton and normally on the upper dexter side, formed by a perpendicular line from the top meeting a horizontal line from the side. A period into which a game is divided. . quarterfinal
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Quarter as a noun (usually plural):
Any substantial fraction of something less than half, particularly: A division or section of a town or other area, whether or not it constituted a fourth of the whole. A living place, from which: # A quartermaster; a quartermaster sergeant. #* |title=No More Parades|publisher=Penguin|year_published=2012|chapter=Parade's End|page=360|passage=Tietjens said: ‘Send the Canadian sergeant-major to me at the double….' to the quarter.}} # Amity, friendship, concord; accommodation given to a defeated opponent, mercy. #* #* and yet kept good quarter between themselves.}} #* The part on either side of a horse's hoof between the toe and heel, the side of its coffin. The aftmost part of a vessel's side, roughly from the last mast to the stern.
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Quarter as a verb (transitive):
To divide into quarters; to divide by four.
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Quarter as a verb (transitive):
To provide housing for military personnel or other equipment.
Examples:
"'Quarter the horses in the third stable."
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Quarter as a verb (intransitive):
To lodge; to have a temporary residence.
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Quarter as a verb (transitive):
To quartersaw.
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Quarter as a verb (obsolete):
To drive a carriage so as to prevent the wheels from going into the ruts, or so that a rut shall be between the wheels.