Apedia

Stakes Noun Defense Long Set Line Cliffs Miles

Front palisade \pal-uh-SAYD\
Back noun
1. a) A fence of stakes especially for defense.
b) A long strong stake pointed at the top and set close with others as a defense.
2. A line of bold cliffs.

["Palisade" derives via French from the Latin noun "palus," meaning "stake." The word originally applied to one of a series of stakes set in a row to form an enclosure or fortification. "The Palisades" is also the name given to the line of traprock cliffs that stretches for about 15 miles along the western bank of the Hudson River in southeastern New York and northern New Jersey. Purportedly, these cliffs got their name from the resemblance of the tall rocks to rows of stakes or trees, although who exactly came up with the name is a matter of dispute. Before long "palisade" came to refer to any similar formation of tall cliffs.]

"What is known as Wenlock Edge, a great palisade, almost 1,000 feet high, running for 15 miles through the county of Shropshire, overlooks, near its eastern end, the tidy town of Much Wenlock." — From an article by Frank Deford in Smithsonian, July-August 2012

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Cui bono surprise kwee boh-noh noun benefit latin

Previous card: Gibbous adjective moon latin meaning describe word jib-us

Up to card list: Hard English Vocabulary