GARDEN, GARDENER, GARDENING
ADJECTIVES
1715 — HORTULANARY of a garden or gardening → obs.
1819 — GARDENLY appropriate to a garden
1838 — GARDENESQUE partaking of the character of a garden; somewhat resembling a garden or what belongs to a garden
1854 — HORTICOLOUS inhabiting or growing in the garden
NOUNS
..950 — LEIGHTON a garden → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1000 — ORCHARD a garden for herbs and fruit-trees → obs.
1300 — VERGER a garden or orchard; a pleasure-garden → obs.
1300 — YARD a kitchen-garden or cottage-garden → obs. exc. Sc. & Eng. dial.
1483 — CALE-GARTH → CALGARTH a cabbage garden, a kale yard → obs.
1567 — SMELLING CHEAT a garden or orchard → cant obs.
1589 — LUST-GARDEN a pleasure-garden → obs.
1595 — YARD-DIKE a garden wall → obs.
1601 — GARDENAGE the practice or employment of cultivating a garden; horticulture → obs.
1602 — ADAM’S PROFESSION gardening → sl.
1604 — PALISADO in gardening: a light fence or trellis-work on which trees or shrubs are trained; an espalier; hence, a row of trees or shrubs so trained, or a row of trees or shrubs forming a close hedge → obs.
1609 — GARDEN-STEAD a plot of land used as a garden → obs.
1610 — PARADISE a pleasure-garden in general → obs.
1625 — HEATH part of a garden left more or less in the wild state → obs.
1658 — AREA a garden bed or border → obs.
1658 — PALISADE in gardening: a light fence or trellis-work on which trees or shrubs are trained; an espalier; hence, a row of trees or shrubs so trained, or a row of trees or shrubs forming a close hedge → obs.
1660 — MAIL-GARDEN a garden the products of which are raised for sale → Sc.
1688 — YELVE a garden-fork → Eng. dial.
1706 — OLITORY a kitchen-garden (herbs) → obs.
1707 — GARDEN-WARE produce of a garden → obs.
1711 — GARDENERSHIP the art and practice of gardening → obs.
1712 — HALL a space in a garden or grove enclosed by trees or hedges → obs.
1714 — YARD-DYKE a garden wall → Sc.
1725 — KAIL-YARD → KALE-YARD a cabbage-garden, kitchen-garden, such as is commonly attached to a small cottage → Sc.
1733 — GARDENAGE the produce of a garden → obs.
1769 — GARDENHOOD garden-like character
1772 — GARDEN-THINGS produce of a garden → obs.
1775 — LITEN a garden → Eng. dial.
1812 — TRUCK PATCH a vegetable garden → Amer. dial.
1819 — PANE a section or plot of ground in a garden, orchard, etc. → Eng. dial.
1837 — SAUCE-GARDEN a garden in which vegetables are grown for the table
1842 — POSY YARD a flower garden → Amer. dial.
1851 — TALLY in market-gardening: five dozen (cabbages, bunches of turnips, etc.)
1851 — TRUCK GARDEN a vegetable garden → Amer. dial.
1875 — PARADISE the garden of a convent → obs.
1880 — POSY BED a flower garden → Amer. dial.
1887 — YAIRDIN a garden → Sc.
1892 — GARDENERY the office or department of a gardener
..L19 — DOLLY VARDEN the garden → rhyming sl.
..L19 — ONE AND ELEVENPENCE THREE FARDEN a garden → rhyming sl.
1902 — KALE-GARTH a kitchen-garden, a small cottage garden → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1905 — YARD-FOOT the lower end of a garden → Sc. (Bk.)
1905 — YARD-HEAD the upper end of a garden → Sc. (Bk.)
1917 — TABLE GARDEN a vegetable garden for home consumption → Amer. dial.
1961 — BEG YOUR PARDON a garden → UK rhyming sl.
NOUNS, PERSON
1000 — LEIGHTONWARD a gardener → obs.
1300 — GARDENER a person employed to tend, cultivate, or lay out a garden
1340 — GARDENER a person who is skilled or knowledgeable in gardening, or who cultivates a garden as a pastime
1526 — ORTOLAN a gardener → obs.
1630 — ADAMIST one who tends a garden
1647 — GARDENERESS a female gardener; a gardener’s wife
1706 — TOPIARIUS one skilled in landscape-gardening
1759 — MALLEE → MALLEY → MALLIE → MAULLY → MOLLEE → MOLLIE → MOLLY one of the gardener caste in India; hence, any native gardener → Anglo-Indian
1772 — GARDENING FARMER a farmer who cultivates fruit and vegetables; a market gardener
1786 — GARDENIST a garden designer
1788 — YARD-BOY a general labourer; a gardener or gardener’s boy → obs. exc. Caribbean
1795 — MAIL-GARDENER a market gardener → Sc.
1798 — GARDEN BOY a man or boy engaged to work in a garden
..19C — DIGGUMS a gardener → sl.
1844 — TRUCK GARDENER one who grows garden produce for sale → Amer. dial.
1856 — TRUCKER one who grows garden produce for sale → Amer. dial.
1860 — SAUCE MARKETER a market gardener or greengrocer → Amer. dial. (Bk.)
1866 — CABBAGE-GELDER a greengrocer or market-gardener → sl.
1886 — POT-CROCKER a boy employed in a large garden to learn gardening → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1888 — GARDEN-SMITH a gardener; a person who has a small allotment of land which he cultivates as a garden → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1900 — GAIRNER a gardener → Sc. (Bk.)
1910 — TOPIARIST one skilled in landscape-gardening
2006 — YARD DOGS nursery employees → Amer. gardening sl. (Bk.)
VERBS
1420 — PASTINATE to dig, to loosen by digging; to dig in a garden → obs.
1830 — GARDENIZE to act as a gardener; to render like a garden