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A quarter is one-fourth, , 25% or 0.25. Quarter or quarters may refer to:


Places

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Quarter (urban subdivision) A quarter is a section of an urban settlement. A quarter can be administratively defined and its borders officially designated, and it may have its own administrative structure (subordinate to that of the city, town or other urban area). Such a ...
, a section or area, usually of a town


Placenames

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Quarter, South Lanarkshire Quarter is a village in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, on the hill above the Clyde Valley. History Francis Groome described the village in 1884-4 thus: :"Quarter Ironworks and Darngaber, a conjoint village in Hamilton parish, Lanarkshire, 3 mi ...
, a settlement in Scotland * Le Quartier, a settlement in France *
The Quarter, Anguilla The Quarter is one of the fourteen Districts of Anguilla Anguilla ( ) is a British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean. It is one of the most northerly of the Leeward Islands in the Lesser Antilles, lying east of Puerto Rico and the Virg ...
* Quartier, Sud, Haiti


Arts, entertainment, and media

* Quarters (children's game) or bloody knuckles, a schoolyard game involving quarters or other coins * Quarters (game), a drinking game * '' Quarters!'', a 2015 album by the psychedelic rock group King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard *
Quarter note A quarter note (American) or crotchet ( ) (British) is a musical note played for one quarter of the duration of a whole note (or semibreve). Quarter notes are notated with a filled-in oval note head and a straight, flagless stem. The stem us ...
, in music one quarter of a whole note * "Quarters" (Wilco song) * "Quarter" (song)


Coins

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Quarter (Canadian coin) The quarter, short for quarter dollar, is a Canadian coin worth 25 cents or one-fourth of a Canadian dollar. It is a small, circular coin of silver colour. According to the Royal Canadian Mint, the official name for the coin is the 25-cent pie ...
, valued at one-fourth of a Canadian dollar * Quarter (United States coin), valued at one-fourth of a U.S. dollar **
Washington quarter The Washington quarter is the present quarter dollar or 25-cent piece issued by the United States Mint. The coin was first struck in 1932; the original version was designed by sculptor John Flanagan. As the United States prepared to celebrate ...
, the current design of this coin *
Quarter farthing The British quarter farthing was a denomination of sterling coinage worth of a pound, of a shilling, or of a penny. It was produced for circulation in Ceylon in various years between 1839 and 1853, with proof coins being produced in 1868. It ...
, a British monetary unit * Quarter dollar, unit of currencies that are named dollar * Quarter guinea, a British coin


Military

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General quarters General quarters, battle stations, or action stations is an announcement made aboard a navy, naval warship to signal that all hands (everyone available) aboard a ship must go to battle stations (the positions they are to assume when the ves ...
, a naval status requiring all hands to go to battle stations *
Barracks Barracks are usually a group of long buildings built to house military personnel or laborers. The English word originates from the 17th century via French and Italian from an old Spanish word "barraca" ("soldier's tent"), but today barracks are u ...
or quarters, buildings built to house military personnel or laborers * Quarter, a promise or guarantee of mercy to a vanquished enemy; see
Safe conduct Safe conduct, safe passage, or letters of transit, is the situation in time of international conflict or war where one state, a party to such conflict, issues to a person (usually an enemy state's subject) a pass or document to allow the enemy ...


Time

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Academic quarter (class timing) An academic quarter (localized into various languages in the countries where it is practised) is the quarter-hour (15 minute) discrepancy between the defined start time for a lecture or lesson ("per schema") and the actual starting time, at some u ...
, term used by universities in various European countries for the 15 minutes between the defined start time for a lecture and the actual time it will start *
Academic quarter (year division) An academic quarter refers to the division of an academic year into four parts. Historical context The modern academic quarter calendar can be traced to the historic English law court / legal training pupillage four term system: * Hilary: Ja ...
, a division of an academic year lasting from 8 to 12 weeks *
Quarter days In British and Irish tradition, the quarter days were the four dates in each year on which servants were hired, school terms started, and rents were due. They fell on four religious festivals roughly three months apart and close to the two solsti ...
, in British and Irish tradition, one of four dates in each year on which rents, etc. were due *
Quarter (calendar year) Generally speaking, a calendar year begins on the New Year's Day of the given calendar system and ends on the day before the following New Year's Day, and thus consists of a whole number of days. A year can also be measured by starting on any o ...
, one of four divisions of a calendar year * One of four divisions (each three months) of a
fiscal year A fiscal year (or financial year, or sometimes budget year) is used in government accounting, which varies between countries, and for budget purposes. It is also used for financial reporting by businesses and other organizations. Laws in many ju ...


Other uses

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Quarter (unit) The quarter ( "one-fourth") was used as the name of several distinct English units based on ¼ sizes of some base unit. The "quarter of London" mentioned by ''Magna Carta'' as the national standard measure for wine, ale, and grain was ¼ ton or ...
, various obsolete customary units of measurement *
Quarters of nobility Quarters of nobility is an expression used in the bestowal of hereditary titles and refers to the number of generations in typically an ahnentafel in which noble status has been held by a family regardless of whether a title was actually in use by ...
or quarterings, the number of generations in which noble status has been held by a family *
Hanged, drawn and quartered To be hanged, drawn and quartered became a statutory penalty for men convicted of high treason in the Kingdom of England from 1352 under King Edward III (1327–1377), although similar rituals are recorded during the reign of King Henry III ( ...
, formerly a punishment for treason in England *
Quarter (heraldry) Quartering is a method of joining several different coats of arms together in one shield by dividing the shield into equal parts and placing different coats of arms in each division. Typically, a quartering consists of a division into four ...
*
William Quarter William J. Quarter (January 21, 1806 – April 10, 1848) was an Irish American prelate of the Catholic Church. He was the first Bishop of Chicago (1844–1848). Biography Early years William Quarter was born in Killurin, King's County, Ireland ...
(1806–1848)


See also

* * *
1/4 (disambiguation) 1/4 or or or in decimal from 0.25 may refer to: * The calendar date January 4, in month-day format * The calendar date 1 April in day-month format * 1st Battalion, 4th Marines, an infantry battalion in the United States Marine Corps * A fracti ...
* No quarter (disambiguation) * The Quarters (disambiguation) * QTR (disambiguation) *
Quart (disambiguation) Quart is an imperial and US customary unit of volume. Quart may also refer to: * Quart, a coin worth of a Gibraltarian real * Quart Festival, a music festival in Norway * Quart, a proposed metric typographic unit Places * Quart, Aosta Valley ...
* Quarterdeck (disambiguation) * Quartering (disambiguation) * Quartet (disambiguation) *
Quarterly A magazine is a periodical publication, generally published on a regular schedule (often weekly or monthly), containing a variety of content. They are generally financed by advertising, purchase price, prepaid subscriptions, or by a combinati ...
, a magazine published four times a year * ''
Quartiere A (; plural: ) is a territorial subdivision of certain Italian towns. The word derives from (‘fourth’) and was thus properly used only for towns divided into four neighborhoods by the two main roads. It has been later used as a synonymous ...
'', a subdivision of certain Italian towns *
Quartier (unit) The quarter ( "one-fourth") was used as the name of several distinct English units based on ¼ sizes of some base unit. The "quarter of London" mentioned by ''Magna Carta'' as the national standard measure for wine, ale, and grain was ¼ ton or ...
, an obsolete French unit of measurement *
Quartile In statistics, a quartile is a type of quantile which divides the number of data points into four parts, or ''quarters'', of more-or-less equal size. The data must be ordered from smallest to largest to compute quartiles; as such, quartiles are a ...
, a term from statistics, meaning "fourth" * Fourth (disambiguation) {{Disambiguation, geo, surname