Associations to the word «Mile»
Noun
Adverb
Wiktionary
MILE, noun. The international mile: a unit of length precisely equal to 1.609344 kilometers established by treaty among Anglophone nations in 1959, divided into 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards.
MILE, noun. Any of several customary units of length derived from the 1593 English statute mile of 8 furlongs, equivalent to 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards of various precise values.
MILE, noun. Any of many customary units of length derived from the Roman mile (mille passus) of 8 stades or 5,000 Roman feet.
MILE, noun. Any of many customary units of length from other measurement systems of roughly similar values, as the Chinese (里) or Arabic mile (al-mīl).
MILE, noun. (informal) Any similarly large distance.
MILE, noun. (slang) A race of 1 mile's length; a race of around 1 mile's length (usually 1500 or 1600 meters)
MILE, noun. (slang) One mile per hour, as a measure of speed.
MILE HIGH CITY, proper noun. (informal) Nickname of the city of Denver, Colorado, U. S. A..
MILE HIGH CLUB, proper noun. (humorous) A notional club that one joins by having sex aboard an aircraft.
MILE LONG CLUB, proper noun. (humorous) A notional club that one joins by having sex aboard a train.
Dictionary definition
MILE, noun. A unit of length equal to 1,760 yards or 5,280 feet; exactly 1609.344 meters.
MILE, noun. A unit of length used in navigation; exactly 1,852 meters; historically based on the distance spanned by one minute of arc in latitude.
MILE, noun. A large distance; "he missed by a mile".
MILE, noun. A former British unit of length once used in navigation; equivalent to 6,000 feet (1828.8 meters).
MILE, noun. A former British unit of length equivalent to 6,080 feet (1,853.184 meters); 800 feet longer than a statute mile.
MILE, noun. An ancient Roman unit of length equivalent to 1620 yards.
MILE, noun. A Swedish unit of length equivalent to 10 km.
MILE, noun. A footrace extending one mile; "he holds the record in the mile".
Wise words
Don't use words too big for the subject. Don't say
"infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise you'll have no
word left when you want to talk about something really
infinite.