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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: HAN-HEG |
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HEDGES AND FENCES . The object of the hedge 1 or fence (abbreviation of " defence ") is to mark a boundary or to enclose 1 Hedge is a Teutonic word, cf. Dutch heg, Ger. Hecke; the root appears in other English words, e.g. " haw," as in " hawthorn." an area of land on which stock is kept. The hedge, i.e. a row of bushes or small trees, forms a characteristic feature of the scenery of England, especially in the midlands and south; it is more rarely found in other countries. Its disadvantages as a fence are that it is not portable, that it requires cutting and training while young
hardy
wood
From the fact that tramps and vagabonds frequently sleep under hedges the word has come to be used as a term of contempt, as in " hedge-priest," an inferior and illiterate kind of parson at one time existing in England and Ireland, and in " hedge-school," a low class school held in the open air, formerly very common in Ireland. From the sense of " hedge " as an enclosure or barrier the' verb "to hedge" means to enclose, to form a barrier or defence, to bound or limit. As a sporting term the word is used in betting to mean protection from loss, by betting on both sides, by "laying off " on one side, after laying odds on another or vice versa. The word was early used figuratively in the sense of to avoid committing oneself. See articles in the Cyclopaedia of American Agriculture, vol. i., ed. by L. H. Bailey (New York
Wright
Young
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