/kwɔːt/, /kwɔɹt/, /kɔɹt/
OriginFrom Middle English quart, quarte, from Old French quarte, carte, from Latin quartus (“one-fourth”). Cognate with Spanish cuarto (“quarter; room, quarters”).
- A unit of liquid capacity equal to two pints; one-fourth (quarter) of a gallon. Equivalent to 1.136 liters in the UK and 0.946 liter (liquid quart) or 1.101 liters (dry quart) in the U.S.
- Four successive cards of the same suit.
“A tierce major is good against any other tierce; a quart minor is good against a tierce major.”
- obsoleteA fourth; a quarter; hence, a region of the earth.
“Camber did possesse the Westerne quart.”
- The fourth defensive position; quarte.
“[W]e behold two men with lion-look, with alert attitude, side foremost, right foot advanced; flourishing and thrusting, stoccado and passado, in tierce and quart; intent to skewer one another.”
- obsolete, uncountableSafety, soundness; health.
“Now if ye felt your belly in ſuche caſe, that ye muſt be fayne al daye to tende it with warme clothes, oꝛ els ye were not able to abide the payne, would ye recken your belly ſicke oꝛ whole? I wene ye ”
- dialectal, obsoleteSafe, sound; healthy.
- dialectalTransverse.
- dialectalContentious or quarrelsome.
- dialectalCrosswise; across.
- A comune of the Aosta Valley autonomous region, Italy.
- A municipality of Gironès, Comarques Gironines, Girona, Catalonia, Spain.
- A surname
- Josie Alice Quart (1895–1980), Canadian senator
Formsquarts(plural) · more quart(comparative) · most quart(superlative) · quarts(present, singular, third-person) · quarting(participle, present) · quarted(participle, past) · quarted(past)