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20 answers for: From the Old English meaning "hedge", fruits of th...
RANKANSWERCLUE
HAWSFrom the Old English meaning "hedge", fruits of the tree Crataegus that form part of the countryside's seasonal bounty with brambles, rosehips, elderberries and sloes (4)
HAWIn which a whortleberry is a hedge fruit (3)
THORNGlastonbury ___; tree Crataegus monogyna with a sprig or branch sent to the Queen at Christmas in a custom dating back to the 17th century (5)
HAWTHORNSpring-flowering shrub also called May-tree, Crataegus (8)
ACREFrom the Old English meaning "open field", a word for a unit of land area that is etymologically related to the name of the fruit of the oak (4)
HARVESTFrom the Old English meaning "autumn", the cutting and gathering of crops during the approach to the aforesaid season, or the name given to its corresponding full moon (7)
MONTHFrom the Old English meaning "moon", each of the 12 divisions or lunations of the calendar year (5)
ABUSIMBELEgyptian rock-cut temples that form part of the UNESCO World Heritage Site known as the Nubian Monum
KEEPFrom the Old English meaning "to observe" or "compare", the donjon or tower at the heart of a medieval castle, used as a refuge (4)
WATCHFrom the Old English meaning "to be or remain awake", a period of surveillance; a sailor's turn of duty; or, a timepiece for the wrist
TADPOLEFrom the Old English meaning "toad head", the larva or "pollywiggle" of a frog, newt, salamander or the first mentioned amphibian; or, a political hack other than Taper in Benjamin Disraeli's novel Co
YARDSFrom the Old English meaning "twigs", units used since the medieval period that are equal to three feet (5)
PLAYFrom the Old English meaning "to exercise", "brisk movement" and related to the Middle Dutch "leap for joy, dance", a dramatic work for the stage; or, activity for amusement (4)
WRONGFrom the Old English meaning "awry, unjust", word meaning either incorrect or immoral (5)
READERSFrom the Old English meaning "interpreters of dreams", book lovers, also called bibliophagists (7)
GOSSIPFrom the Old English meaning "godparent", a word for a close friend or one invited to attend a birth that later came to mean chitchat, idle talk or tittle-tattle (6)
DAIRYFrom the Old English meaning "kneader of bread", a building, farm or room where milk is processed or made into butter, cheese, cream, creme fraiche and other produce (5)
LASTSFrom the Old English meaning "footprints", wooden models upon which cordwainers fashion shoes (5)
LORDNobleman or peer whose title derives from the Old English meaning "bread-keeper"; or, a dominant planet in astrology (4)
ROADWord, derived from the Old English meaning "journey on horseback", for a highway (4)