mile - meaning and definition. What is mile
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What (who) is mile - definition

UNIT OF LENGTH
Statute mile; International mile; Roman mile; Statute miles; Statute Mile; Statute mile in the UK; Mile (Scots); Mile rate; Scots mile; Scottish mile; Land mile; Miles; Mile (Scottish length); US mile; Roman miles; English miles; Survey mile; Mile (Scottish); English mile; Mérföld; Croatian mile; Mile (unit); Miglia; Italian mile; Old English mile; Milion (unit); Million (unit); Greek mile; Byzantine mile; Mille passus; US survey mile; Austrian mile; Danish mile; German mile; Hungarian mile; Portuguese mile; Prussian mile; Russian mile; English statute mile; Dutch mile; Statute Mile (US); Imperial mile; U.S. survey mile; United States survey mile; US statute mile; U.S. statute mile; United States statute mile; Statute mile (US); Statute mile (United States); Statute mile (UK); Silesian mile; Breslau mile; Wroclaw mile; Wrocław mile; Mile length; Welsh mile
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  • Mercator]]. The scalebar is expressed in "Hours walking or common Flemish miles", and includes three actual scales: small, medium and big Flemish miles.
  • Milestone on [[Mountbellew]] Bridge, erected c. 1760. Distances are given in Irish miles.
  • Meridians]] are great circles that pass through the poles.
  • zero-mile marker]] of the [[Roman road network]], in the [[Roman Forum]]
  • degree of meridian]]"

mile         
n.
1) a land, statute; nautical, sea mile
2) (misc.) to miss by a mile ('to miss by a great deal')
Mile         
·noun A certain measure of distance, being equivalent in England and the United States to 320 poles or rods, or 5,280 feet.
mile         
¦ noun
1. (also statute mile) a unit of linear measure equal to 1,760 yards (approximately 1.609 kilometres).
2. historical a Roman measure of 1,000 paces.
3. (miles) informal a very long way or a very great amount.
¦ adverb (miles) informal by a great amount or a long way: I feel miles better.
Phrases
be miles away informal be lost in thought.
go the extra mile make a special effort to achieve something.
run a mile informal be very alarmed or frightened.
stand (or stick) out a mile informal be very obvious.
Origin
OE mil, based on L. mil(l)ia, plural of mille 'thousand'.

Wikipedia

Mile

The mile, sometimes the international mile or statute mile to distinguish it from other miles, is a British imperial unit and United States customary unit of distance; both are based on the older English unit of length equal to 5,280 English feet, or 1,760 yards. The statute mile was standardised between the British Commonwealth and the United States by an international agreement in 1959, when it was formally redefined with respect to SI units as exactly 1,609.344 metres.

With qualifiers, mile is also used to describe or translate a wide range of units derived from or roughly equivalent to the Roman mile (roughly 1.48 km), such as the nautical mile (now 1.852 km exactly), the Italian mile (roughly 1.852 km), and the Chinese mile (now 500 m exactly). The Romans divided their mile into 5,000 pedēs ("feet"), but the greater importance of furlongs in the Elizabethan-era England meant that the statute mile was made equivalent to 8 furlongs or 5,280 feet in 1593. This form of the mile then spread across the British Empire, some successor states of which continue to employ the mile. The US Geological Survey now employs the metre for official purposes, but legacy data from its 1927 geodetic datum has meant that a separate US survey mile (6336/3937 km) continues to see some use, although it was officially phased out in 2022. While most countries replaced the mile with the kilometre when switching to the International System of Units (SI), the international mile continues to be used in some countries, such as Liberia, the United Kingdom, the United States, and a number of countries with fewer than one million inhabitants, most of which are UK or US territories or have close historical ties with the UK or US.

Examples of use of mile
1. Controversy surrounds travel expenses, which are paid at 40p a mile for cars, 24p a mile for motorcycles and 20p a mile for bicycles.
2. Block after block of homes, mile after mile, rot in pitch–blackness.
3. "Now I run four times a week÷ two five–mile runs and two four–mile runs.
4. Behind high fences, sprawling factory compounds stretch mile after dusty, depressing mile along the congested roads.
5. Along this coast, for mile after mile, the wind and water swept the land clean.