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  • Asked on December 20, 2021 in Single word requests.

    One of the terms used

    in a walled garden is “high walls” (a hedged garden) and other terms that apply for protection from natural intruders if the garden is not enclosed by high walls, while traditional walled gardens also have numerous walled gardens. Under the meaning “high walls” (among other places) all gardens have been hedged about or walled about, it’s actually called a walled garden. Garden walls may also serve a decorative purpose, but their essential function in the north temperate zone has been to shelter the garden from wind and frost.

    Curiously, the literal meaning of the word “paradise” IS “walled garden” but it has long since lost that meaning

    The word “paradise” entered English from the French paradis, inherited from the Latin paradisus, from Greek paru00e1deisos (), and ultimately from an Old Iranian root, attested in Avestan as pairi.dau00eaza-. The literal meaning of this Eastern Old Iranian language word is “walled (enclosure)”, from pairi- “around” + -diz “to create, make”. Is this word not attested in other Old Iranian languages (these may however be hypothetically reconstructed, for example as Old Persian *paridayda-).

    Can you use hortus chinodrome?

    “The word ‘garden’ is at root the same as the word “yard”. She means an enclosure”, observes Derek Clifford at the outset of a series of essays on garden design, in which he skirted the conventions of the hortus conclusus. So, at their root both of the words in hortus conclusus refer linguistically to enclosure.

    What are the differences between a non-English speaker and a non-English speaker?

    • 274193 views
    • 9 answers
    • 100481 votes
  • Asked on September 5, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on September 5, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on September 4, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on September 3, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on September 1, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on August 31, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on August 31, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on August 31, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes
  • Asked on August 23, 2021 in Meaning.

    ‘Let bygones be bygones’, is

    the phrase more famous than the more literal ‘let sleeping dogs lie’ or the old proverb. ‘All things past, pass’, according to John Heywood in his 1561 edition of Proverbs. Don’t the unpleasantness between us become a thing of the past. Let bygones be bygones’ uses both meanings of the word ‘bygones’ and means, in extended form, ‘let people find out all that you have said in classless interactions have happened?’

    What may be a phrase but the meaning of saying is closer to a first meaning of

    words versus a second?

    • 404822 views
    • 85 answers
    • 149726 votes