|
HEMS |
Fences |
|
PLANS |
Fences |
|
CRASH BARRIERS |
Safety fences (5,8) |
|
HEDGEROWS |
Fences of bushes |
|
|
PALISADES |
Fences of stakes |
|
FEES |
Costs for external fences |
|
ENFORCES |
Insists upon fences or alternative |
|
REAP |
Sales agent fences in a harvest |
|
|
FENCING |
The materials used for building fences. |
|
PICKET |
A pointed pale, used in marking fences. |
|
TEENAGE |
The longer wood for making or mending fences. |
|
IMPROVEMENT |
Valuable additions or betterments, as buildings,
clearings, drains, fences, etc., on premises. |
|
PALE |
That which incloses or fences in; a boundary; a limit; a
fence; a palisade. |
|
BREACHY |
Apt to break fences or to break out of pasture; unruly;
as, breachy cattle. |
|
INCLOSER |
One who, or that which, incloses; one who fences off land
from common grounds. |
|
FENCER |
One who fences; one who teaches or practices the art of
fencing with sword or foil. |
|
VIEWER |
A person appointed to inspect highways, fences, or the
like, and to report upon the same. |
|
HAYBOTE |
An allowance of wood to a tenant for repairing his hedges
or fences; hedgebote. See Bote. |
|
WASTE |
To damage, impair, or injure, as an estate, voluntarily, or
by suffering the buildings, fences, etc., to go to decay. |
|
POKE |
A contrivance to prevent an animal from leaping or breaking
through fences. It consists of a yoke with a pole inserted, pointed
forward. |
|
RAIL |
A bar of timber or metal, usually horizontal or nearly so,
extending from one post or support to another, as in fences,
balustrades, staircases, etc. |
|
STAKE |
A piece of wood, usually long and slender, pointed at one
end so as to be easily driven into the ground as a support or stay; as,
a stake to support vines, fences, hedges, etc. |
|
TIMBER |
That sort of wood which is proper for buildings or for
tools, utensils, furniture, carriages, fences, ships, and the like; --
usually said of f... |
|
LAND |
..., pastures,
woods, etc., and everything annexed to it, whether by nature, as trees,
water, etc., or by the hand of man, as buildings, fences, et... |
|
SUPERFICIES |
...r of
a building, so closely connected by art or nature as to constitute a
part of it, as houses, or other superstructures, fences, trees, vines,... |