English

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Etymology

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acacia (A flowering shrub often grown ornamentally) + avenue (a broad tree-lined street). Streets named after trees are common on planned housing estates.

Proper noun

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Acacia Avenue

  1. (UK) A placeholder name for a residential street.
    • 2011 February 14, Julian Knight, Wills, Probate, and Inheritance Tax For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 284:
      To Paul Hubbard of 11 Acacia Avenue, Anytown, Anyshire I give the residue of my estate.
  2. (UK) An archetypal middle-class suburban residential street.
    • 1948, Alon Kadish, quoting Lt. Whidborne, The British Army in Palestine and the 1948 War: Containment, Withdrawal and Evacuation, Routledge, →ISBN:
      In company lines intricate fences have sprung up around fantastic gardens. The officers' lines have begun to acquire an “Acacia Avenue” aspect.
    • 2004 January 1, David A. Reisman, Schumpeter's Market: Enterprise and Evolution, Edward Elgar Publishing, →ISBN, page 107:
      Nor, however, is the 'bourgeois' the Acacia Avenue accountant with two children in boarding-school education.
    • 2013 June 20, Stephen Baxter, Terry Pratchett, The Long War: (Long Earth 2), Random House, →ISBN, page 117:
      A woman worked a garden behind a neat whitewashed fence, a real Acacia Avenue kind of scene.