51³Ô¹Ï

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blackacre

[ blak-ey-ker ]

noun

(often initial capital letter)
  1. an arbitrary name for a piece of land used for purposes of supposition in legal argument or the like (often distinguished from whiteacre ).


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51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins

Origin of blackacre1

First recorded in 1620–30; black + acre
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Pinsky’s “At the Foundling Hospital†was a poetry finalist, along with Ishion Hutchinson’s “House of Lords and Commons,†Tyehimba Jess’ “Olio,†Bernadette Mayer’s “Works and Days,†and Monica Youn’s “Blackacre.â€

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Later sections include a variety of styles and other kinds of acres — greenacre, brownacre — as the work builds to two poems titled “Blackacre.â€

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In the final episode, he was seen performing with his Blackacre Road Band - the positive reaction to which led to the album's recording.

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When I first learned about like-kind exchanges many years ago, the regulations seemed to always be talking about a couple of farmers exchanging Whiteacre for Blackacre to ease the commuting that their flocks had to do or something like that.

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It does not follow that this John is identical with the John Stiles who is found as baptized in 1795 at Blackacre, the son of William Stiles.

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