impalisade

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English

Etymology

From im- +‎ palisade.

Verb

impalisade (third-person singular simple present impalisades, present participle impalisading, simple past and past participle impalisaded)

  1. To fence with pales.
    • 1836, The United Service Magazine - Part 3, page 402:
      In treating of the attack of posts, I referred only to the impalisaded turf works usually thrown up by infantry in the midst of a campaign.
    • 1896, John Denham Parsons, The Non-Christian Cross: An Enquiry into the Origin and History of the Symbol Eventually Adopted as That of Our Religion, →ISBN:
      It is consequently most significant to find, as we do upon due investigation, that wherever it occurs in the pre-Christian classics it is used as meaning to impalisade, or stake, or affix to a pale or stake; and has reference, not to crosses, but to single pieces of wood.
    • 1905, The Nineteenth Century and After - Volume 57, page 498:
      In fact, the word atavpów never signified in true classical Greek to 'crucify,' but to “impalisade by striking in pales'—that is to say, to 'enclose,' or to “fence': 'Thou fencest him from the multitude—who will fence him from himself?' (Empedocles on Etna); and so to 'set apart,' to 'consecrate.'