×
The virgate, yardland, or yard of land (Latin: virgāta [terrae]) was an English unit of land. Primarily a measure of tax assessment rather than area, ...
People also ask
Virgate (from the Latin virgātus, "rod-like") is an adjective in botanical and mycological jargon. Cannomois virgata, a species of reed with virgate stems ...
Le Virgate ou yardland est une ancienne unité de mesure anglo-saxonne des surfaces de terres utilisée dans l'Angleterre médiévale, particulièrement en ...
Rhymes: (US) -eɪt. Noun edit. virgate (plural virgates). (historical) The yardland: an obsolete English land measure usually comprising 1⁄4 of a hide and ...
Stephanomeria virgata, commonly called rod wirelettuce, twiggy wreath plant, and virgate wirelettuce, is a herbaceous annual plant of the family Asteraceae.
Ferrisia virgata, commonly known as the striped mealybug, is a species of mealybug belonging to the Pseudococcidae family. F. virgata parasitizes different ...
Celosia virgata, or albahaca, is found in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands but not in the continental United States. It is a perennial subshrub.
Missing: Virgate | Show results with:Virgate
The meaning of VIRGATE is an old English unit of land area usually understood as equaling one quarter of a hide (thirty acres). How to use virgate in a ...
Missing: wikipedia | Show results with:wikipedia
vir·gate ... adj. Shaped like a wand or rod; straight, long, and slender. [Latin virgātus, made of twigs, from virga, twig.] ...
an early English measure of land of varying extent, usually considered equivalent to a quarter of a hide, or about 30 acres (12 hectares).
Missing: wikipedia | Show results with:wikipedia