kailyard - перевод на Английский
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kailyard - перевод на Английский

SPACE SEPARATE FROM THE REST OF THE RESIDENTIAL GARDEN
Potager garden; Kailyard; Herb garden; Vegetable garden; Vegetable gardens; Kitchen Garden; Garden of Simples; Herb gardens; Herb Garden; Witches garden; Potager; Kitchen gardens; Kitchen-garden; Kitchen-gardens; Herbal garden; Vegetable patch; Kailyaird; Potager (garden)
  • At the [[Château de Villandry]], [[France]], the old formal flower beds have been turned over in recent decades entirely to vegetables, giving a striking, if untypical, scene.
  • Typical potager ([[French intensive gardening]]) with its traditional [[scarecrow]] in the French countryside
  • [[Companion planting]] of carrots and onions
  • Part of the ''potager du roi'' at Versailles, with steps for mounting the wall at bottom right.
  • [[Cowbridge Physic Garden]], [[Wales]]
  • Walled 17th-century kitchen garden at [[Ham House]] near London, with [[orangery]] in the distance.

kailyard         

['keiljɑ:d]

существительное

Шотландия

огород

синоним

kaleyard

Смотрите также

kailyard school - kailyard novelists

kailyard         
kailyard noun 1) = kaleyard 2) attr. - kailyard school - kailyard novelists
kailyard school         
  • ''Beside the Bonnie Brier Bush'', 1894: front cover design
19TH-CENTURY SCOTTISH LITERARY MOVEMENT
Kailyard School; Kailyard authors; Kailyardism; Kailyard movement; Kallyard School
kailyard school писатели (конца XIX - начала XX вв.), широко применявшие местный диалект при описании шотландского народного быта

Определение

potager
['p?t?d??]
¦ noun a kitchen garden.
Origin
C17: from Fr. jardin potager 'garden providing vegetables for the pot'.

Википедия

Kitchen garden

The traditional kitchen garden, vegetable garden, also known as a potager (from the French jardin potager) or in Scotland a kailyaird, is a space separate from the rest of the residential garden – the ornamental plants and lawn areas. It is used for growing edible plants and often some medicinal plants, especially historically. The plants are grown for domestic use; though some seasonal surpluses are given away or sold, a commercial operation growing a variety of vegetables is more commonly termed a market garden (or a farm). The kitchen garden is different not only in its history, but also its functional design. It differs from an allotment in that a kitchen garden is on private land attached or very close to the dwelling. It is regarded as essential that the kitchen garden could be quickly accessed by the cook.

Historically, most small country gardens were probably mainly or entirely used as kitchen gardens, but in large country houses the kitchen garden was a segregated area, normally rectangular and enclosed by a wall or hedge, walls being useful for training fruit trees as well as offering shelter from wind. Such large examples very often included greenhouses and furnace-heated hothouses for more tender delicacies, and also flowers for display in the house; an orangery was the ultimate type. In large houses, the kitchen garden was typically placed diagonally to the rear and side of the house, not impeding the views from the front and rear facades, but still quick to access. In some cases, hardy flowers for cutting were grown outside there, rather than in the flower garden. A large country house hardly expected to buy any vegetables, herbs or fruit, and the surplus was often distributed as presents; the walled example at Croome Court in England covers seven acres, and the gardens have a large "Temple Greenhouse", an orangery in the form of a Roman Temple.

A symbol of American self-sufficiency and the colonial homestead, practical kitchen gardens were the center of home life in early America. In Europe, especially Britain, the difficulties in food supply during World War II resulted in a huge, if temporary, upsurge in growing vegetables in small gardens, with much encouragement from the government Ministry of Food. In modern gardening, there has been interest in integrating the growing of food plants within a mainly ornamental garden; fruit trees and cooking herbs are the simplest and most popular expression of this.

Примеры употребления для kailyard
1. The Kailyard School did not have a superquango to support it.
2. The "Kailyard" School (dialect for "cabbage patch", taking its name from the traditional song There Grows a Bonnie Brier Bush in Our Kailyard) is not much remembered in the age of Irvine Welsh and James Kelman, but a century ago its mixture of kenspeckle lads and picturesque patois ("siller", "bawbees" and so on) did huge business among a reading public avid for sentiment, whimsical humour and pathos.
3. The book that made Barrie‘s name, however, was Sentimental Tommy (18'6), an odd conflation of Kailyard School and London slum novel, given colour by Barrie‘s by now trademarked imaginative gloss.
Как переводится kailyard на Русский язык