are

Misspelling of our.

Determiner

  1. Misspelling of our.

Origin

From the phonetic similarity between our and are in many English dialects (both /ɑː(ɹ)/).

Noun

  1. An accepted (but deprecated and rarely used) metric unit of area equal to 100 square metres, or a former unit of approximately the same extent. Symbol: a.

Origin

From French are.

Forms

ares

Synonyms

square decametre

Derived

centiare decare hectare milliare

Verb

  1. second-person singular simple present of be
    • Mary, where are you going?
  2. first-person plural simple present of be
    • We are not coming.
    • Here we are! - 2016, VOA Learning English (public domain):
  3. second-person plural simple present of be
    • Mary and John, are you listening?
  4. third-person plural simple present of be
    • They are here somewhere.
    • BEloued, beleeue not euery ſpirit, but trie the ſpirits, whether they are of God: becauſe many falſe prophets are gone out into the woꝛld. - 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker,...
  5. present of be

Origin

Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *arun? Old English earon Middle English aren English are From Middle English aren, from Old English (Anglian) earun, earon (“are”, plural). Possibly reinforced by the Old Norse plural forms in er-, this displaced the alternative forms Old English sind and bēoþ. In the second person singular it displaced archaic art. Further etymology controversial: * The English forms, as well as the Old Swedish forms in ær-, could reflect Proto-Germanic preterite-present *ōr ~ *arum, from Proto-Indo-European *h₃e-h₃ór-h₂e (“I have risen”, perfect). * Since they are not the expected outcomes of the Proto-Germanic forms of *wesaną (“to be”) in *iz-, they would have to be irregular alterations. For Seebold this explanation is still preferable as similar variants in other verbs are not uncommon.

Forms

aren arn ar

Synonyms

art

Related

am art be been beest being is was wast were wert