different between decare vs dunam

decare

English

Etymology

deca- +? (hect)are.

Noun

decare (plural decares)

  1. A unit of surface area equal to 10 ares (that is, 1,000 square metres, or approximately 0.25 acres)

Synonyms

  • (Greece): stremma, royal stremma
  • (Turkey): See dunam

Translations

See also

  • acre
  • hectare

Anagrams

  • EAERCD

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dunam

English

Etymology

From Hebrew ???????? (dunam) or Arabic ??????? (d?num), from Turkish dönüm, from dönmek (to turn). A probable calque of Byzantine Greek unit ??????? (strémma, stremma, literally that which is turned).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?d?n.?m/
  • Rhymes: -?n?m

Noun

dunam (plural dunams)

  1. (historical) An Ottoman Turkish unit of surface area nominally equal to 1,600 square (Turkish) paces but actually varied at a provincial and local level according to land quality to accommodate its colloquial sense of the amount of land able to be plowed in a day, roughly equivalent to the Byzantine stremma or English acre.
    • 1922, James Joyce, Ulysses:
      You pay eight marks and they plant a dunam of land for you with olives, oranges, almonds or citrons.
  2. A modern Turkish unit of surface area equal to a decare (1000 m2), equivalent to the modern Greek stremma.
  3. Various other units in other areas of the former Ottoman Empire, usually equated to the decare but sometimes varying (as in Iraq, where it is 2500 m2).

Synonyms

  • stremma, old stremma, Turkish stremma, Ottoman stremma

References

Anagrams

  • Duman, Munda, mandu, maund, undam, unmad

dunam From the web:

  • = 1000 m^2
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