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Encyclopedia Britannica



DIKE, or DYKE (Old Eng. dic, a word which appears in various forms in many Teutonic languages, cf. Dutch dijk, German Teich, Danish dige, and in French, derived from Teutonic, digue; it is the same word as " ditch " and is ultimately connected with the ro

This article appears in Volume V08, Page 270 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DEM-DIO
DIKE, or DYKE (Old Eng. dic, a word which appears in various forms in many Teutonic languages, cf. Dutch dijk, German Teich, Danish dige, and in French, derived from Teutonic, digue; it is the same word as " ditch " and is ultimately connected with the ro ot of " dig "), properly a trench dug out of the earth for defensive and other purposes. Water naturally collects in such trenches, and hence the word is applied to natural and artificial channels filled with water, as appears in the proverbial expression "
February
  fill-dyke," and in the names of many narrow water-ways in
East
  Anglia. " Dike " also is naturally used of the bank of earth thrown up out of the ditch, and so of any embankment, dam or causeway, particularly the defensive works in Holland, the Fen
district
  of England, and other low-lying districts which are liable to flooding by the sea or rivers (see HOLLAND and FENS). In
Scotland
  any
wall
 , fence or even hedge, used as a boundary is called a dyke. In geology the
term
  is applied to
wall
 -like masses or
rock
  (sometimes projecting beyond the surrounding surface) which fill up vertical or highly inclined fissures in the strata.


End of Article: DIKE, or DYKE (Old Eng. dic, a word which appears in various forms in many Teutonic languages, cf. Dutch dijk, German Teich, Danish dige, and in French, derived from Teutonic, digue; it is the same word as " ditch " and is ultimately connected with the ro


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