desperance: (Default)
[personal profile] desperance
So I had cause to enquire online about definitions of quick the noun, and I found - inter alia - this:

Chiefly British .
a.
a line of shrubs or plants, especially of hawthorn, forming a hedge.
b.
a single shrub or plant in such a hedge.


Now I am in fact chiefly British, and I have never come across this usage. Is this just my gardeny ignorance? Do people talk all the time about a quick of hawthorn? I think it's rather lovely, but it's utterly new to me.

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Date: 2012-07-14 10:49 am (UTC)
inamac: (Default)
From: [personal profile] inamac
Ooooh, that's interesting. I know 'quickset hedge' so assume that 'quick' is the root form and has the same meaning of 'quick' as opposed to 'dead' (a quickset hedge being upright and growing, while a laid hedge is, well, cut through at the base and laid prone/dead.)

You learn something every day!

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