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OETfence

fence

Flag: gbEnglishOxford English Thesaurus

fence
noun
1 she crept through a gap in the fence:
barrier, paling, railing, rail, bar, hurdle, enclosure;
wall, hedge, hedgerow, windbreak, groyne, partition;
barricade, stockade, palisade, rampart, protection, defence;
rare circumvallation.
2 informal he was an accomplished fence, dealing mainly in jewellery:
receiver of stolen goods, dealer in stolen goods;
receiver, dealer, trafficker;
informal pusher.
on the fence (also sitting on the fence)
informal
they were on the fence about the whole issue:
undecided, uncommitted, uncertain, unsure, vacillating, wavering, dithering, hesitant, tentative, doubtful, irresolute, ambivalent, torn, in two minds, in a dilemma, on the horns of a dilemma, in a quandary;
abstaining;
neutral, impartial, non-aligned, non-partisan, unbiased, open-minded;
British humming and hawing;
informal iffy, blowing hot and cold.
verb
1 they intend to fence off many acres of wild land:
enclose, surround, circumscribe, encircle, circle, encompass, bound, form a barrier around, form a ring round;
divide up, section off, separate off, partition off, cut off, cordon off, close off, isolate, segregate, seal, close;
literary gird, girdle, engird;
rare compass.
2 he needed more wire to fence in his chickens:
confine, pen in, coop up, rail in, box in, wall in, hedge in, hem in, close in, shut in, shut up, mew up, immure, lock in, shut off, separate off, cut off;
intern, impound, hold captive, keep under lock and key;
enclose, surround, kettle;
secure, protect, defend;
North American corral.
3 the man fenced but Jim persisted with his questions:
be evasive, be vague, be ambiguous, be non-committal, equivocate, prevaricate, stall, vacillate, quibble, hedge, beat about the bush, dodge the issue, sidestep the issue, parry questions, fudge the issue, mince one's words;
informal pussyfoot around, duck the question, duck the issue, waffle, shilly-shally;
British, informal flannel;
rare palter, tergiversate.
4 informal these fellows fenced for a band of grave robbers:
receive stolen goods, deal in stolen goods.
fence Oxford Dictionary of English