hurst
See also: Hurst
English
    
    Etymology
    
From Middle English hirste (“wood, grove; hillock; sandbank, sandbar”), from Old English hyrst (“hillock, eminence, height, wood, wooded eminence”), from Proto-West Germanic *hursti; akin to Dutch horst (“thicket; bird's nest”), German Horst (“thicket, nest”).
Pronunciation
    
- (General American) IPA(key): /hɝst/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /hɜːst/
- Audio (Southern England) - (file) 
- Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)st
Noun
    
hurst (plural hursts)
- (rare outside place names) A wood or grove.
- 1612, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion, song 2 p. 27:- Where, to her neighboring Chase, the curteous Forrest show’d
 So just conceived joy, that from each rising a hurst,
 Where many a goodlie Oake had carefullie been nurst,
 
- 1963, P[hilip] M[aitland] Hubbard, Flush as May, New York, N.Y.: London House & Maxwell, →LCCN, page 158:- ‘How you grandiloquise. A forest of uncertainty. But there – I slow down, as you say. I hesitate. I wonder if – no , let’s try further down. I cannot see the hurst for the elms.’
 
- 2000, Grazing Ecology and Forest History, →ISBN, page 150:- A blackthorn seedling can in this way expand into a hurst of 0,1-0, 5 ha in the space of 10 years, […]
 
- 2010, Adam Nicolson, Sissinghurst: A Castle's Unfinished History, page 124:- A recognizable world seems to balloon up out of the names […] . Lovehurst down in the clay lands towards Staplehurst means "the hurst that was left to someone in a will": Legacy Wood. Its near neighbor, Tolehurst, originally called Tunlafahirst, means something like Heir's Farm Wood.
 
 
Derived terms
    
- Bredhurst
- Goudhurst
- Hawkhurst
- Higher Hurst
- Hurst Green
- Lyndhurst
- Sandhurst
- Sissinghurst
- Staplehurst
Translations
    
Middle English
    
    
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