- fortification consisting of a strong fence made of stakes driven into the ground
- wall: surround with a wall in order to fortify
- A palisade is a steel or wooden fence or wall of variable height, usually used as a defensive structure.
- (The Palisades (Napa County)) The The Palisades are a mountain range in Napa County, California.
- A wall of wooden stakes, used as a defensive barrier; A line of cliffs; An even row of cells. e.g.: palisade mesophyll cells; To equip with a palisade
- (palisading) A row of palisades set in the ground
- (Palisades) A line of bold cliffs.
- (Palisades) An area of nearly vertical basalt columns exposed along the west bank of the Hudson River just north of New York City.
- (Palisades) stakes of split wood approx. 3 metres long fixed one metre in the ground in rows.
- (the Palisades) a popular New Jersey amusement park, now closed.
- used to describe hyphae that are erect and parallel with each other.
- Layer of mesophyll cells in leaves that are closely placed together under the epidermal layer of the leaf. Palisade parenchyma: Columnar cells located just below the upper epidermis in leaves the cells where most of the light absorbtion in photosynthesis occurs. PICTURE 1 | PICTURE 2
- To dream of the palisades, denotes that you will alter well-formed plans to please strangers, and by so doing, you will impair your own interests.
- A walled enclosure built around a village or town, a stockade.
- (also "stockade"): a fence formed of vertical posts placed side-by-side. Usually intended for defensive purposes.
- A timber fence or wall surrounding a bailey of a keep.
- A sturdy wooden fence usually built to enclose a site until a permanent stone wall could be constructed.
- An exposure of basalt columns resembling the log walls of a wooden fort. (photo)
- A high fence around a defensive enclosure made of stakes, poles, palings, or pickets, supported by rails and set endwise in the ground from six to nine inches apart. See: Stockade.
- Also known as a palizado (see below). Defensive work surrounding a settlement. At the Colony of Avalon the palisade was made of posts, rails and trees which were seven feet tall and sharpened at the top.
- Fairly recent American cross of Tettnager and open pollenation resulting in a moderate alpha hop with good aroma characteristics. (Alpha acid 6-10% / beta acid 4-7%)
- a row of pointed wooden stakes standing close together in the ground
- Many of the earthlodge villages of the Plains Village peoples, and later the Arikara and Mandan, were fortified by a deep ditch and a log stockade wall, also known as a palisade.
- A palisade is a fence on a slight 45 degree angle, which leans into the direction you are jumping it. This fence can easily be made more technical by the addition of a ditch in front, so that both the ditch and palisade have to be jumped at the same time.
- Defensive fence of tall posts constructed at the perimeter of pā, with lighter timbers between tall posts. See also stockade.