Hedging - Law Dictionary Search Results
Hagia
Hagia, a hedge, Dugd. Mon., tom. 2, p. 273.
Hay
Hay, a hedge or enclosure; a net to take game, Jac. Law. Dict.
Hay-bote
to take thorns and other wood to make and repair hedges, gates, fences, etc., either by tenant for life or years;
Heyloed
upon inferior tenants for mending or repairing the heys or hedges.
Raddle
between upright posts or stakes in making a kind of hedge or fence
Natural justice
They can supplement the law but cannot supplant it (per Hedge, J. in A.K. Kraipak [(1970) 1 SCR 457: (1969) 2
Park
required-1st, a grant thereof; 2nd, enclosure by pale, wall, or hedge; 3rd, beasts of a park, such as buck, does, etc.;
Pickle, Pycle or Pightel
piccolo, Ital]. A small parcel of land enclosed with a hedge, which in some counties is called a pingle.
Punitive and preventive detention
does recognise the existence of this power, but it is hedged-in by various safeguards set out in Articles 21 and 22;
VerbarRhamnus
catharticus are used in medicine The latter is used for hedges
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