See also: Barton, Bartoń, and Bartoň

English

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Etymology

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From Old English bere (barley) + tūn (place).

Noun

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barton (plural bartons)

  1. A farmyard.
    • 1816, John Keats, For there's Bishop's Teign:
      There's the barton rich / With dyke and ditch / And hedge for the thrush to live in [...].
    • 1915, Thomas Hardy, The Oxen:
      So fair a fancy few would weave / In these years! Yet, I feel, / If someone said on Christmas Eve, / “Come; see the oxen kneel, / “In the lonely barton by yonder coomb / Our childhood used to know,” / I should go with him in the gloom, / Hoping it might be so.
  2. the lands of a manor reserved for the Lord's use
  3. (archaic) an arrangement of blocks and pulleys; a burton

Anagrams

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