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    Cop·pice
    /ˈkäpəs/

    noun

    • 1. an area of woodland in which the trees or shrubs are, or formerly were, periodically cut back to ground level to stimulate growth and provide firewood or timber: "coppices of oak were cultivated"

    verb

    • 1. cut back (a tree or shrub) to ground level periodically to stimulate growth: "the company began to coppice the woodland for conservation purposes"
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  3. COPPICE meaning: 1. an area of closely planted trees in which the trees are cut back regularly to provide wood: 2…. Learn more.

    • Etymology
    • Noun
    • Verb
    • References

    From Middle English copies, from Old French copeiz (“a cut-over forest”), from presumed Vulgar Latin *colpaticium (“having the quality of being cut”), from *colpāre (“to cut, strike”), from *colpus (“a blow”), from Latin colaphus (“a cuff, box on the ear”), from Ancient Greek κόλαφος (kólaphos, “a blow, slap”).

    coppice (plural coppices) 1. A grove of small growth; a thicket of brushwood; a wood cut at certain times for fuel or other purposes, typically managed to promote growth and ensure a reliable supply of timber. See copse. 1.1. 1907, Harold Bindloss, chapter 1, in The Dust of Conflict‎: 1.1.1. […]belts of thin white mist streaked the brown plough lan...

    coppice (third-person singular simple present coppices, present participle coppicing, simple past and past participle coppiced) 1. (transitive) To manage (a wooded area) sustainably, as a coppice, by periodically cutting back woody plants to promote new growth. 1.1. Her plan to coppicethe woods should keep her self-sufficient in fuel indefinitely. ...

    Douglas Harper (2001–2024), “coppice”, in Online Etymology Dictionary. [see also its linking entry coup]

  4. coppice: 1 n a dense growth of bushes Synonyms: brush , brushwood , copse , thicket Types: show 5 types... hide 5 types... brake an area thickly overgrown usually with one kind of plant canebrake a dense growth of cane (especially giant cane) spinney a copse that shelters game underbrush , undergrowth , underwood the brush (small trees and ...

  5. A copse or grove of young trees or plants. Chiefly in spring of wood (cf. wood, n.¹ I.2a). Obsolete. grovet 1504–1736. A little grove. coppice 1538–. A small wood or thicket consisting of underwood and small trees grown for the purpose of periodical cutting. copsewood 1543–. A copse, n. archaic or Obsolete.

  6. Definition of coppice noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. 2 days ago · coppice in British English. (ˈkɒpɪs ) noun. 1. a thicket or dense growth of small trees or bushes, esp one regularly trimmed back to stumps so that a continual supply of small poles and firewood is obtained. verb. 2. (transitive) to trim back (trees or bushes) to form a coppice. 3. (intransitive)

  8. coppice. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English cop‧pice1 /ˈkɒpɪs $ ˈkɑː-/ noun [ countable] a copse Examples from the Corpus coppice • The second crop was of underwood and coppice, with felling taking place at intervals of seven years or so. • Yet until the 1950s most had been managed as coppice since Norman times ...

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