virgate

Etymology 1
Borrowed from, from , "yard" compared to "virga" as a measuring rod. .

Noun

 * 1)  The yardland: an obsolete English land measure usually comprising $1/undefined$ of a hide and notionally equal to 30 acres.

Usage notes
The hide was originally intended to represent the amount of land farmed by a single household but was primarily connected to obligations owed to the Saxon and Norman kings and thus varied greatly from place to place. Around the time of the Domesday Book under the Normans, the hide was usually but not always the land expected to produce £1 (1 Tower pound of sterling silver) in income over the year, meaning the yardland was expected to produce five shillings (3 Tower ounces of sterling silver). In fact, the yardland became associated with its own obligations and thus also varied, in some places being reckoned as $1/undefined$ of a hide rather than $1/undefined$. Virgate is a later retronym used to distinguish the unit from the yard of 3 feet.

Hypernyms

 * (400 virgates) See hundred
 * (4 virgates) See carucate

Hyponyms

 * See oxgang
 * See nook
 * See fardel
 * See acre

Etymology 2
Borrowed from.



Adjective

 * 1) Rod-shaped: straight, long, and thin,  the habitus of plants with straight, erect branches.
 * 2)  Finely striped, often with dark fibers.