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Across

Across is a versatile English preposition and adverb used to express movement from one side of something to the other, or a spread over a distance or area. It can denote physical crossing (walk across the field), a direction or path (go across to the other side), or spatial distribution (polling results spread across the country). As an adverb, it can stand alone (The river runs across) or accompany a noun phrase to indicate location relative to another object (The house sits across from the school).

Etymology traces across to Old English acros, formed from a- plus cross, and it has long been

In practical use, across commonly appears in phrases that describe position or movement: across the street,

Common idioms and phrases include across the board (universal application), across from (on the opposite side

Overall, across functions as a directional and distributive term that highlights crossing a boundary or spanning

used
to
convey
transcending
a
boundary
or
traversing
a
space.
The
usage
contrasts
with
over
in
that
across
emphasizes
traversal
along
or
across
a
span
rather
than
simply
being
above
something.
across
the
room,
or
across
the
Atlantic.
It
is
also
used
to
indicate
distribution
or
reach,
as
in
“across
Europe”
or
“across
the
board,”
the
latter
meaning
applying
to
all
items
or
participants.
of),
and
across
the
years
(throughout
a
period).
Figurative
uses
can
describe
widespread
impact,
reach,
or
coverage
across
a
field,
region,
or
population.
a
space,
with
wide
applicability
in
physical,
geographic,
and
metaphorical
contexts.