FENCE - 18 definitions found
Websters 1828 Dictionary 
Fence FENCE, n. fens. [See Fend.] 1. A wall, hedge, ditch, bank,
or line of posts and rails, or of boards or pickets, intended to confine
beasts from straying, and to guard a field from being entered by cattle,
or from other encroachment. A good farmer has good fences about his farm;
an insufficient fence is evidence of bad management. Broken windows and
poor fences are evidences of idleness or poverty or of both. 2. A
guard; any thing to restrain entrance; that which defends from attack,
approach or injury; security; defense. A fence betwixt us and the
victor's wrath. 3. Fencing, or the art of fencing; defense.
4. Skill in fencing or defense. FENCE, v.t. fens. 1. To
inclose with a hedge, wall, or any thing that prevents the escape or
entrance of cattle; to secure by an inclosure. In New England, farmers,
for the most part, fence their lands with posts and rails, or with stone
walls. In England, lands are usually fenced with hedges and ditches.
He hath fenced my way that I cannot pass. Job 19. 2. To guard; to
fortify. So much of adder's wisdom I have learnt, to fence my ear
against thy sorceries. FENCE, v.i. 1. To practice the art
of fencing; to use a sword or foil, for the purpose of learning the art of
attack and defense. To fence well is deemed a useful accomplishment for
military gentlemen. 2. To fight and defend by giving and avoiding
blows or thrusts. They fence and push, and pushing, loudly roar,
their dewlaps and their sides are bathed in gore. 3. To raise a fence;
to guard. It is difficult to fence against unruly cattle.
WordNet (r) 2.1 (2005) 
fence
n 1: a barrier that serves to enclose an area [syn: fence,
fencing]
2: a dealer in stolen property
v 1: enclose with a fence; "we fenced in our yard" [syn:
fence, fence in]
2: receive stolen goods
3: fight with fencing swords
4: surround with a wall in order to fortify [syn: wall,
palisade, fence, fence in, surround]
5: have an argument about something [syn: argue, contend,
debate, fence]
Dictionary of Ro 
fence
- dulaf
English Language Idioms 
fence
fens See: GRASS IS ALWAYS GREENER ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE FENCE, MEND ONE'S FENCES,
ON THE FENCE.
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 11th Edition (2003) 
fence I. noun
Usage: often attributive Etymology: Middle English fens,
short for defens defense Date: 14th century 1.
archaic a means of protection ; defense 2.
a. a barrier intended to prevent escape or intrusion or to mark
a boundary; especially such a barrier made of posts and wire or
boards b. an immaterial barrier or boundary line <on the other
side of the fence in the argument>
3. fencing 1 4.
a. a receiver of stolen goods b. a place where stolen
goods are bought
• fenceless adjective • fencelessness noun
II. verb (fenced; fencing)
Date: 15th century transitive verb
1. a. to enclose with a fence b.
(1) to keep in or out with a fence (2) to ward off
2. to provide a defense for 3. to sell (stolen property)
to a fence
intransitive verb 1.
a. to practice fencing b.
(1) to use tactics of attack and defense resembling those of
fencing (2) to parry arguments by shifting ground
2. archaic to provide protection • fencer noun
Oxford English Reference Dictionary 
fence n. & v. --n. 1 a barrier or railing or other upright structure enclosing an area of ground, esp. to prevent or control access. 2 a large upright obstacle in steeplechasing or
showjumping. 3 sl. a receiver of stolen goods. 4 a guard or guide in machinery. --v. 1 tr. surround with or as with a fence. 2 tr. a (foll. by in, off) enclose or separate with or as
with a fence. b (foll. by up) seal with or as with a fence. 3 tr. (foll. by from, against) screen, shield, protect. 4 tr. (foll. by out) exclude with or as with a fence; keep out. 5 tr. (also
absol.) sl. deal in (stolen goods). 6 intr. practise the sport of fencing; use a sword. 7 intr. (foll. by with) evade answering (a person or question). 8 intr. (of a horse etc.) leap
fences. Phrases and idioms: sit on the fence remain neutral or undecided in a dispute etc. Derivatives: fenceless adj. fencer n. Etymology: ME f. DEFENCE
Collins COBUILD Advanced Learner\'s English Dictionary 
fence
(fences, fencing, fenced)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1. A fence is a barrier between two areas of land, made of wood or wire supported by posts.
Villagers say the fence would restrict public access to the hills.
N-COUNT
2. If you fence an area of land, you surround it with a fence.
The first task was to fence the wood to exclude sheep...
Thomas was playing in a little fenced area full of sand.
VERB: V n, V-ed
3. A fence in show jumping or horse racing is an obstacle or barrier that horses have
to jump over.
N-COUNT
4. If one country tries to mend fences with another, it tries to end a disagreement
or quarrel with the other country. You can also say that two countries mend fences.
Washington was last night doing its best to mend fences with the Europeans, saying it
understood their concerns...
PHRASE: V inflects, PHR with n, pl-n PHR
5. If you sit on the fence, you avoid supporting a particular side in a discussion
or argument.
They are sitting on the fence and refusing to commit themselves...
PHRASE: V inflects
English Explanatory Dictionary 
fence
fens n. & v. --n. 1 a barrier or railing or other upright structure
enclosing an area of ground, esp. to prevent or control access. 2 a large
upright obstacle in steeplechasing or showjumping. 3 sl. a receiver of stolen
goods. 4 a guard or guide in machinery. --v. 1 tr. surround with or as with
a fence. 2 tr. a (foll. by in, off) enclose or separate with or as with a
fence. b (foll. by up) seal with or as with a fence. 3 tr. (foll. by from,
against) screen, shield, protect. 4 tr. (foll. by out) exclude with or as
with a fence; keep out. 5 tr. (also absol.) sl. deal in (stolen goods). 6
intr. practise the sport of fencing; use a sword. 7 intr. (foll. by with)
evade answering (a person or question). 8 intr. (of a horse etc.) leap
fences. øsit on the fence remain neutral or undecided in a dispute
etc. øøfenceless adj. fencer n. [ME f. DEFENCE]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Fence \Fence\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Fenced (?); p. pr. & vb. n.
Fencing.]
1. To fend off danger from; to give security to; to protect;
to guard.
To fence my ear against thy sorceries. --Milton.
2. To inclose with a fence or other protection; to secure by
an inclosure.
O thou wall! . . . dive in the earth, And fence not
Athens. --Shak.
A sheepcote fenced about with olive trees. --Shak.
To fence the tables (Scot. Church), to make a solemn
address to those who present themselves to commune at the
Lord's supper, on the feelings appropriate to the service,
in order to hinder, so far as possible, those who are
unworthy from approaching the table. --McCheyne.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Fence \Fence\, n. [Abbrev. from defence.]
1. That which fends off attack or danger; a defense; a
protection; a cover; security; shield.
Let us be backed with God and with the seas, Which
he hath given for fence impregnable. --Shak.
A fence betwixt us and the victor's wrath.
--Addison.
2. An inclosure about a field or other space, or about any
object; especially, an inclosing structure of wood, iron,
or other material, intended to prevent intrusion from
without or straying from within.
Leaps o'er the fence with ease into the fold.
--Milton.
Note: In England a hedge, ditch, or wall, as well as a
structure of boards, palings, or rails, is called a
fence.
3. (Locks) A projection on the bolt, which passes through the
tumbler gates in locking and unlocking.
4. Self-defense by the use of the sword; the art and practice
of fencing and sword play; hence, skill in debate and
repartee. See Fencing.
Enjoy your dear wit, and gay rhetoric, That hath so
well been taught her dazzing fence. --Milton.
Of dauntless courage and consummate skill in fence.
--Macaulay.
5. A receiver of stolen goods, or a place where they are
received. [Slang] --Mayhew.
Fence month (Forest Law), the month in which female deer
are fawning, when hunting is prohibited. --Bullokar.
Fence roof, a covering for defense. ``They fitted their
shields close to one another in manner of a fence roof.''
--Holland.
Fence time, the breeding time of fish or game, when they
should not be killed.
Rail fence, a fence made of rails, sometimes supported by
posts.
Ring fence, a fence which encircles a large area, or a
whole estate, within one inclosure.
Worm fence, a zigzag fence composed of rails crossing one
another at their ends; -- called also snake fence, or
Virginia rail fence.
To be on the fence, to be undecided or uncommitted in
respect to two opposing parties or policies. [Colloq.]
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) 
Fence \Fence\, v. i.
1. To make a defense; to guard one's self of anything, as
against an attack; to give protection or security, as by a
fence.
Vice is the more stubborn as well as the more
dangerous evil, and therefore, in the first place,
to be fenced against. --Locke.
2. To practice the art of attack and defense with the sword
or with the foil, esp. with the smallsword, using the
point only.
He will fence with his own shadow. --Shak.
3. Hence, to fight or dispute in the manner of fencers, that
is, by thrusting, guarding, parrying, etc.
They fence and push, and, pushing, loudly roar;
Their dewlaps and their sides are bat?ed in gore.
--Dryden.
As when a billow, blown against, Falls back, the
voice with which I fenced A little ceased, but
recommenced. --Tennyson.
Jargon File (4.3.1, 29 Jun 2001) 
fence n. 1. A sequence of one or more distinguished ({out-of-band})
characters (or other data items), used to delimit a piece of data
intended to be treated as a unit (the computer-science literature calls
this a `sentinel'). The NUL (ASCII 0000000) character that terminates
strings in C is a fence. Hex FF is also (though slightly less
frequently) used this way. See zigamorph. 2. An extra data value
inserted in an array or other data structure in order to allow some
normal test on the array's contents also to function as a termination
test. For example, a highly optimized routine for finding a value in an
array might artificially place a copy of the value to be searched for
after the last slot of the array, thus allowing the main search loop to
search for the value without having to check at each pass whether the
end of the array had been reached. 3. [among users of optimizing
compilers] Any technique, usually exploiting knowledge about the
compiler, that blocks certain optimizations. Used when explicit
mechanisms are not available or are overkill. Typically a hack: "I call
a dummy procedure there to force a flush of the optimizer's
register-coloring info" can be expressed by the shorter "That's a fence
procedure".
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia 
FENCE
fens (batsar, mibhtsar):
Commonly used in the King James Version in the description of fortified places,
as the translation of batsar, "to cut off," "to separate," "to fortify"
(and forms) (De 3:5; 9:1; 28:52, etc.); mibhtsar, "fenced city,"
is a fortified place (Nu 32:17,36; Jos 10:20; 19:35, etc.); matsor,
"fenced cities," means "bulwark," "citadel" (2Ch 8:5); metsurah,
"fortification" (2Ch 11:23; 12:4; 14:6; 21:3); for "fenced" the
American Standard Revised Version substitutes "fortified" in all these
instances; in Da 11:15, mibhtsar is "a well-fortified city," margin
"the fortified cities," the English Revised Version "well-fenced"; "fence"
is also the translation of gadher, "a wall" or "fence" (Job 19:8 the
American Standard Revised Version, "walled up" (gadhar); Ps 62:3);
`azaq, "to loosen" (the ground) as with a mattock (Isa 5:2, where the
King James Version has "fenced" it (the vineyard), the American Standard
Revised Version "digged it," the English Revised Version "made a trench
about it," it" margin "digged it" sukh, "to interweave" or "interlace"
(Job 10:11, the Revised Version (British and American) "clothed");
male', "to be or become full" (2Sa 23:7, the Revised Version (British
and American) "armed," margin "Hebrew filled").
ERV has "fence" for "wall" (Nu 22:24; Isa 5:5; Ho 2:6; the American
Standard Revised Version retains "wall"), for "hedge" (Ec 10:8; Eze 13:5;
22:30; the American Standard Revised Version "wall"); "fenced" for
"walled" (Nu 13:28; De 1:28; the American Standard Revised Version
"fortified"); compare for "strong" Jos 19:29; Ne 9:25; Ps 108:10
(margin Jos 19:29, "the city of Mibzar-zor, that is, the fortress of
Tyre," the English Revised Version ,"fenced"), for "hedged" (La 3:7,
American Revised Version, "walled"); compare for "defenced," the English
Revised Version "fenced," the American Standard Revised Version "fortified"
(Isa 36:1; 37:26, etc.); "fences" for "hedges" (Ps 80:12, the
American Standard Revised Version "walls"); in Jer 49:3, the English
Revised Version and the American Standard Revised Version have "fences."
See also HEDGE.
W. L. Walker
Easton's 1897 Bible Dictionary 
Fence
(Heb. gader), Num. 22:24 (R.V.). Fences were constructions of
unmortared stones, to protect gardens, vineyards, sheepfolds,
etc. From various causes they were apt to bulge out and fall
(Ps. 62:3). In Ps. 80:12, R.V. (see Isa. 5:5), the psalmist
says, "Why hast thou broken down her fences?" Serpents delight
to lurk in the crevices of such fences (Eccl. 10:8; comp. Amos
5:19).
U.S. Gazetteer (1990) 
Fence, WI
Zip code(s): 54120
Soule\'s Dictionary of English Synonyms 
fence
I. n.
1. Protecting enclosure, wall, hedge, post-and-rail framing, wire-guard, palings,
etc. (as the case may be).
2. Shield, guard, security, protection, defence.
3. Fencing, art of self-defence, swordsmanship, sword-play.
4. Defensive argument, skill in refutation.
II. v. a.
1. Enclose with a fence.
2. Guard, fortify, defend.
III. v. n.
1. Practise fencing, use the sword.
2. Shuffle, evade, equivocate, prevaricate, hedge.
English Explanatory Dictionary (Synonyms) 
fence
fens n.
1 barrier, enclosure, barricade, confine, wall, rampart; railing(s), palisade: Maurice
had a fence put up round his house.
2 on the fence. undecided, indecisive, vacillating, uncommitted, uncertain, irresolute;
impartial, neutral, non-partisan, unbiased, unprejudiced, unaligned, non-aligned, independent:
She is on the fence with regard to the issue of capital punishment. --v.
3 enclose, encircle, surround, circumscribe, bound, coop, restrict, hedge, confine,
fortify, protect, separate: The pasture is fenced both to keep the sheep in and the wolves
out. Fence off this area for a garden.
4 parry, avoid, fend off, sidestep, dodge, evade, hedge, stonewall, equivocate, palter,
tergiversate, vacillate, shilly-shally, quibble, cavil, beat about the bush, qualify, prevaricate,
Colloq Brit waffle: Awkward questions were adroitly fenced by the chairman. Give a straight
answer and stop fencing.
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 
309 Moby Thesaurus words for "fence":
abatis, about the bush, advanced work, arch dam, arm, armor,
armor-plate, around the bush, avoid, backstop, baffle, balistraria,
balustrade, bamboo curtain, bank, banquette, bar, barbed wire,
barbed-wire entanglement, barbican, barrage, barricade, barrier,
bartizan, bastion, battle, battlement, bear-trap dam, beat about,
beat around, beaver dam, beg the question, bicker, black-market,
black-marketeer, bless, block, blockade, boggle, boom, bootleg,
bound, boundary, box, brawl, breakwater, breastwork, brick wall,
broil, buffer, bulkhead, bulkhead in, bulwark, cage, casemate,
castellate, cavil, center, champion, cheval-de-frise, choplogic,
circumscribe, circumvallation, clash, cloak, close, cofferdam,
collide, combat, come to blows, compass about, compromise, confine,
contend, contest, contravallation, coop, copyright, corral,
counterscarp, cover, crenellate, curtain, cushion, cut and thrust,
dam, defend, defense, demibastion, dig in, dike, ditch, dodge,
drawbridge, duck, duel, earthwork, embankment, embattle, encircle,
enclose, enclosure, ensure, entanglement, entrench, equivocate,
escarp, escarpment, evade, evade the issue, exchange blows, feint,
fences, fend, fend off, feud, fieldwork, fight, fight a duel, foil,
fortalice, fortification, fortify, garrison, gate, give and take,
give satisfaction, glacis, golden mean, grapple, grapple with,
gravity dam, groin, guarantee, guard, half measures,
half-and-half measures, halfway measures, happy medium, harbor,
haven, hedge, hedgerow, hem, hem and haw, hoarding,
hydraulic-fill dam, immure, impartial, indecisive, independent,
insure, iron curtain, irresolute, jam, jetty, jostle, joust, keep,
keep from harm, leaping weir, levee, logjam, loophole, lunette,
machicolation, make safe, man, man the garrison, maneuver,
mantelet, mean, medium, merlon, mew, middle course, middle ground,
middle way, milldam, mine, mix it up, moat, moderantism,
moderate position, moderateness, moderation, moderatism, mole,
moonshine, mound, mystify, nestle, neutral, neutral ground,
nitpick, obscure, on the fence, outwit, outwork, pale, paling,
palisade, palter, parados, parapet, parry, patent, pen, pick nits,
picket, police, portcullis, postern gate, prevaricate, protect,
pull away, pull back, push, pussyfoot, put off, qualify, quarrel,
quibble, rail, railing, rampart, rassle, ravelin, receiver, recoil,
redan, redoubt, register, restrict, retaining wall,
ride shotgun for, riot, roadblock, rock-fill dam, run a tilt,
safeguard, sally port, scarp, sconce, scramble, screen, scuffle,
seawall, secure, separate, sheer off, shelter, shield, shift,
shift off, shilly-shally, shirk, shove, shrink, shroud, shuffle,
shutter dam, shy, shy away, shy off, sidestep, skirmish, spar,
split hairs, step aside, stockade, stone wall, stonewall, stop,
strive, struggle, surround, swagman, swagsman, swerve, tenaille,
tergiversate, third force, thrust and parry, tilt, tourney,
trellis, tussle, unbiased, uncertain, uncommitted, undecided,
underwrite, unprejudiced, vacillate, vacillating, vallation,
vallum, via media, waffle, wage war, wall, war, ward off, weir,
wicket dam, work, wrestle, zigzag fence
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