estate
- estate
es|tate [ ı`steıt ] noun ***
▸ 1 of dead person
▸ 2 area of buildings
▸ 3 rulers of country
▸ 4 situation or state
▸ 5 station wagon
1. ) count or uncount all the property and money that belongs to someone, especially someone who has just died:
Martin was the sole heir to his father's estate.
2. ) count a large area of land where a particular crop is grown:
tea/coffee/wine estates
a ) a very large area of land that belongs to one person, usually with a very big house on it:
She has a team of six people who manage the estate.
b ) BRITISH a DEVELOPMENT of houses: HOUSING ESTATE:
He grew up on an estate.
3. ) count an old word for each of the three groups of people involved in governing a country:
the view that the monarch was not one of the three estates
=> FOURTH ESTATE
4. ) count an old word meaning the situation or state that someone is in:
the holy estate of matrimony
5. ) count BRITISH a STATION WAGON
Usage of the words and phrases in modern English.
2013.
Synonyms:
Look at other dictionaries:
estate — es·tate /i stāt/ n [Anglo French estat, literally, state, condition, from Old French, from Latin status, from stare to stand] 1: the interest of a particular degree, nature, quality, or extent that one has in land or other property compare fee;… … Law dictionary
estate — es‧tate [ɪˈsteɪt] noun [countable] 1. PROPERTY a large piece of land in the country, usually with one large house on it and one owner: • The estate consists of the main villa, several outbuildings and barns, a swimming pool, a farm house and an… … Financial and business terms
Estate — may refer to: * Estate (law), a term used in common law to signify the total of a person s property, entitlements and obligations *Estate (social), a broad social category in the histories of certain countries * Immovable property, real estate or … Wikipedia
Estate — Es*tate ([e^]s*t[=a]t ), n. [OF. estat, F. [ e]tat, L. status, fr. stare to stand. See {Stand}, and cf. {State}.] 1. Settled condition or form of existence; state; condition or circumstances of life or of any person; situation. When I came to man … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
estate — [ə stāt′, istāt′] n. [ME & OFr estat, STATE] 1. a) state or condition [to restore the theater to its former estate] b) a condition or stage of life [to come to man s estate] c) status or rank 2 … English World dictionary
estate — 1. The meaning of estate in the term three estates of the realm is a historical one, ‘an order or class forming part of the body politic’. The three estates are the Lords Spiritual (i.e. the heads of the Church), the Lords Temporal (i.e. the… … Modern English usage
estate — early 13c., rank, standing, condition, from Anglo Fr. astat, O.Fr. estat state, position, condition, health, status, legal estate (Mod.Fr. état), from L. status state or condition, from root of stare to stand from PIE root *sta to stand (see STET … Etymology dictionary
Estate — Es*tate , v. t. 1. To establish. [Obs.] Beau. & Fl. [1913 Webster] 2. Tom settle as a fortune. [Archaic] Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. To endow with an estate. [Archaic] [1913 Webster] Then would I . . . Estate them with large land and territory.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
estate — The intangible entity containing all of the non exempt assets and liabilities of the debtor. (Bernstein s Dictionary of Bankruptcy Terminology) Under the Bankruptcy and insolvency Act, the name given to the file or bankruptcy estate. (Dictionary… … Glossary of Bankruptcy
estate — [n1] extensive manor and its property acreage, area, country home, country place, demesne, domain, dominion, farm, finca, freehold, grounds, holdings, lands, parcel, plantation, quinta, ranch, residence, rural seat, territory, villa; concept 516… … New thesaurus
estate — ► NOUN 1) a property consisting of a large house and extensive grounds. 2) Brit. an area of land and modern buildings developed for residential, industrial, or commercial purposes. 3) a property where crops such as coffee or rubber are cultivated … English terms dictionary