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View synonyms for estate

estate

[ih-steyt]

noun

  1. a piece of landed property, especially one of large extent with an elaborate house on it.

    to have an estate in the country.

  2. Law.

    1. property or possessions.

    2. the legal position or status of an owner, considered with respect to property owned in land or other things.

    3. the degree or quantity of interest that a person has in land with respect to the nature of the right, its duration, or its relation to the rights of others.

    4. interest, ownership, or property in land or other things.

    5. the property of a deceased person, a bankrupt, etc., viewed as an aggregate.

  3. British.,  a housing development.

  4. a period or condition of life.

    to attain to man's estate.

  5. a major political or social group or class, especially one once having specific political powers, as the clergy, nobles, and commons in France or the lords spiritual, lords temporal, and commons in England.

  6. condition or circumstances with reference to worldly prosperity, estimation, etc.; social status or rank.

  7. Obsolete.,  pomp or state.

  8. Obsolete.,  high social status or rank.



verb (used with object)

estated, estating 
  1. Obsolete.,  to establish in or as in an estate.

estate

/ ɪˈsteɪt /

noun

  1. a large piece of landed property, esp in the country

  2. a large area of property development, esp of new houses or ( trading estate ) of factories

  3. property law

    1. property or possessions

    2. the nature of interest that a person has in land or other property, esp in relation to the right of others

    3. the total extent of the real and personal property of a deceased person or bankrupt

  4. Also called: estate of the realman order or class of persons in a political community, regarded collectively as a part of the body politic: usually regarded as being the lords temporal (peers), lords spiritual, and commons See also States General fourth estate

  5. state, period, or position in life, esp with regard to wealth or social standing

    youth's estate

    a poor man's estate

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Word History and Origins

Origin of estate1

1175–1225; Middle English estat < Middle French; cognate with Provençal estat. See state
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Word History and Origins

Origin of estate1

C13: from Old French estat, from Latin status condition, state
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Synonym Study

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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

She spoke of talented children trapped by deprivation - describing "estates with Berlin Walls around them" - and subsequently set up a charity to help young people get access to learning instruments.

From BBC

For a teenage mum from a council estate in Stockport to serve as the highest level of government has been the honour of my life.

From BBC

Daisy began her journey at Downton Abbey as a belabored kitchen maid, but eventually the estate’s revered cook Mrs. Patmore took her under her wing.

“The easiest thing would have been for Robert to plow on until he truly pegged out and by which time the estate probably would have been run into the ground or mismanaged,” Bonneville says.

He said the murder happened at the quieter end of the Cusher Green estate "where a lot of pensioners live".

From BBC

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estanciaestate agent