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WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024ton1 /tʌn/USA pronunciation n. [countable]- Weights and Measuresa unit of weight, equivalent to 2000 pounds (0.907 metric ton) (short ton) in the U.S. and 2240 pounds (1.016 metric tons) (long ton) in Great Britain.
- Weights and Measuresmetric ton.
- Informal TermsOften, tons. [plural] a great quantity;
a lot: [~ + a plural noun]:a ton of pencils.[~ + a uncountable noun]tons of money. -ton-, root. - -ton- comes from Greek, where it has the meaning "sound.'' This meaning is found in such words as: atonal, baritone, detonate, intonation, intone, monotone, monotonous, overtone, semitone, tonal, tone, tonic, undertone.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024ton1 (tun),USA pronunciation n. - a unit of weight, equivalent to 2000 pounds (0.907 metric ton) avoirdupois (short ton) in the U.S. and 2240 pounds (1.016 metric tons) avoirdupois (long ton) in Great Britain.
- Also called freight ton. a unit of volume for freight that weighs one ton, varying with the type of freight measured, as 40 cubic feet of oak timber or 20 bushels of wheat.
- See metric ton.
- See displacement ton.
- a unit of volume used in transportation by sea, commonly equal to 40 cubic feet (1.13 cu. m) (shipping ton or measurement ton.)
- a unit of internal capacity of ships, equal to 100 cubic feet (2.83 cu. m) (register ton.)
- Often, tons.[Informal.]a great quantity;
a lot:a ton of jokes; tons of wedding presents. - British Termsa speed of 100 miles per hour.
- 1350–1400; Middle English; variant of tun
ton2 (Fr. tôn),USA pronunciation n., pl. tons (Fr. tôn).USA pronunciation - high fashion; stylishness.
- the current fashion, style, or vogue.
- Latin tonus tone
- French
- 1755–65
ton•ish, ton•nish (ton′ish)USA pronunciation, adj. ton ′ish•ly, ton′nish•ly, adv. ton ′ish•ness, ton′nish•ness, n. -ton, - a suffix formerly used to form nouns from adjectives:simpleton; singleton.
- variant of dialect, dialectal tone one (see tother)
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