arrear
adverb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L185995 on Wikidata ↗noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L316460 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /əˈɹɪə/ / /əˈɹɪɹ/
adv
Etymology: From Middle English arere, from Old French arere, from Vulgar Latin *ad retro (literally “to the rear”).
- Towards the rear, backwards.
“She, (Ladie) having well before approoved / The feends to be too cruell and severe, / Observ'd th' appointed way, as her behooved, / Ne ever did her ey-sight turne arere [...].”
- Behind time; overdue.
“In case the annuity should be arrear for sixty days being lawfully demanded, then the trustee might enter upon the premises assigned [...].”
noun
Etymology: From Middle English arere, from Old French arere, from Vulgar Latin *ad retro (literally “to the rear”).
- Work to be done, obligation.
“November 4, 1866, James David Forbes, letter to E. C. Batten I have a large arrear of letters to write.”
“My own work, with its manifold arrears, took me all day to clear off.”
- Unpaid debt.
“fall into arrears”
“I know the debt is in arrears / The dog has not been fed in years / It's even worse than it appears, but / It's alright”
- That which is in the rear or behind.