The difference between District and Quarter

When used as nouns, district means an administrative division of an area, whereas quarter means a quarter-dollar, divided into 25 cents.

When used as verbs, district means to divide into administrative or other districts, whereas quarter means to divide into quarters.

When used as adjectives, district means rigorous, whereas quarter means pertaining to an aspect of a quarter.


check bellow for the other definitions of District and Quarter

  1. District as a noun:

    An administrative division of an area.

    Examples:

    "the Soho district of London"

  2. District as a noun:

    An area or region marked by some distinguishing feature.

    Examples:

    "the Lake District in Cumbria"

  3. District as a noun (UK):

    An administrative division of a county without the status of a borough.

    Examples:

    "South Oxfordshire District Council"

  1. District as a verb (transitive):

    To divide into administrative or other districts.

  1. District as an adjective (obsolete):

    rigorous; stringent; harsh

  1. Quarter as an adjective:

    Pertaining to an aspect of a quarter.

  2. 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"

  3. 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."

  1. 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

  2. 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.

  1. Quarter as a verb (transitive):

    To divide into quarters; to divide by four.

  2. Quarter as a verb (transitive):

    To provide housing for military personnel or other equipment.

    Examples:

    "'Quarter the horses in the third stable."

  3. Quarter as a verb (intransitive):

    To lodge; to have a temporary residence.

  4. Quarter as a verb (transitive):

    To quartersaw.

  1. 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.