A blueberry bush can be an edible hedge substitute for either of these hedges in a landscape. The rabbiteye blueberry bush variety may be more suitable for different types of soils.
yes
Osage Orange is also called Bodark, Bodark oak, hedge oak. ( it's not an oak ) It's fruit is often called horse apples and hedge apples... so some ppl refer to the tree as 'horse apple tree' or 'hedge apple tree'. The green fruit is not edible, but the seeds are.
hedge pig= hedge hog
I think there is a flower called a privet rose. -- another answer -- Privet is a shrub of the olive family, with small white, heavily scented flowers and poisonous black berries. • Genus Ligustrum, family Oleaceae: several species, in particular the semievergreen common privet ( L. vulgare), are often grown as a hedge.
If you are talking about "a hedge", as in a row of bushy plants or such, then yes, it is a noun. Hedge can also be used as a verb though, as in "to hedge a garden".
The plural of hedge is hedges.
The noun hedge is used as a collective noun for a hedge of herons.
The plural form of hedge is hedges.
The meaning of a "hedge" would be best described as a "hedge of protection" against the volatile market. Also used in the term Hedge Fund
A hedge fund analyst in a person who works with hedge funds. Their primary duty is to review the strategies of a hedge fund and then identify the strengths and weaknesses of that fund.
Contents as in what do hedge funds invest in?
He is not in Over The Hedge