garden

/ˈɡɑɹdn̩/

UK: /ˈɡɑːdn̩/

garden

English Noun Top 1,757
American (Lessac) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Amy) (medium)
Female 0.7s
American (Ryan) (medium)
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Definition

An outdoor area containing one or more types of plants, usually plants grown for food or ornamental purposes.

Etymology

From Middle English gardyn, garden, from Anglo-Norman gardin, from Frankish *gardin-, oblique stem of *gardō (“enclosure, yard”), from Proto-Germanic *gardô (“enclosure, garden, house”), whence also inherited English yard. (compare Old French jart alongside jardin, Medieval Latin gardīnus). Doublet of jardin. Displaced Old English wyrttūn. Cognates Cognate with West Frisian gard, Low German Goorn, Dutch gaard, gaarde, German Garten, Icelandic garður, French jardin, Spanish jardín, Italian giardino, Sicilian jardinu.

Example Sentences

  • "a vegetable garden"
  • "a flower garden"
  • "[…] I ſuppoſe the North ſide of the water to be the beſt ſide for your garden, that it may haue the comfort of the South Sunne to lye vpon it and face it, and the dwelling houſe to bee aboue it, to defend the cold windes and froſts both from your herbes, and flowers, and early fruits."
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