The yard is used as the standard unit of field-length measurement in the American, English, and Canadian games of football (although Canada has officially adopted the metric system).
The Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2002 only provides for the use of yards and miles when showing distances on British road signposts. But, in 2007 and 2008, many driver location signs using kilometers to specify the distance from specified reference points were erected on many British Motorways.
A corresponding unit of area is the square yard.
In the context of American and Canadian concrete mixers' loads, a cubic yard is always called simply a yard. A typical marking would indicate that a mixer had a capacity of "11 yards" or "1.5 yards".
Yard also is a term used in financial markets for one billion (1010) units of currency (derived from the French milliard) in order to avoid the ambiguity between "billion" and "million". Example: a yard of dollars is $1bn.
The early yard was divided by the binary method into two, four, eight, and sixteen parts called the half-yard, span, finger, and nail. Two yards are a fathom.
In currency and financial market usage, "yard" derives from "milliard", a now rarely used term for 1,000,000,000.