lockspit

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Apparently: lock (fastening) + spit (spade's depth) [1]

Noun[edit]

lockspit (plural lockspits)

  1. (cartography) A trench dug in the ground to mark a boundary or other imaginary line.
    • 1937, Transactions of the Institution of Engineers amd Shipbuilders, volume 80, page 8:
      The widening of the river referred to in items […] was carried out by first cutting a V-shaped trench or lockspit throughout the length of the widenings on the line of the proposed new river bank […].
    • 1966, Blue Book 1966, Southampton: Ordnance Survey:
      Lockspits will not be shown [on maps] in bogs except where they occur on County, Barony and Townland Boundaries.

Verb[edit]

lockspit (third-person singular simple present lockspits, present participle lockspiting, simple past and past participle lockspited)

  1. to dig a such a trench

References[edit]

  1. ^ lockspit”, in OED Online Paid subscription required, Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.

Anagrams[edit]