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hedge
[ hej ]
noun
- a row of bushes or small trees planted close together, especially when forming a fence or boundary; hedgerow:
small fields separated by hedges.
- any barrier or boundary:
a hedge of stones.
- an act or means of preventing complete loss of a bet, an argument, an investment, or the like, with a partially counterbalancing or qualifying one.
verb (used with object)
- to enclose with or separate by a hedge:
to hedge a garden.
- to surround and confine as if with a hedge; restrict (often followed by in, about, etc.):
He felt hedged in by the rules of language.
- to protect with qualifications that allow for unstated contingencies or for withdrawal from commitment:
He hedged his program against attack and then presented it to the board.
- to mitigate a possible loss by counterbalancing (one's bets, investments, etc.).
- to prevent or hinder free movement; obstruct:
to be hedged by poverty.
verb (used without object)
- to avoid a rigid commitment by qualifying or modifying a position so as to permit withdrawal:
He felt that he was speaking too boldly and began to hedge before they could contradict him.
Synonyms: , , , ,
- to prevent complete loss of a bet by betting an additional amount or amounts against the original bet.
- Finance. to enter transactions that will protect against loss through a compensatory price movement.
hedge
/ ɛ /
noun
- a row of shrubs, bushes, or trees forming a boundary to a field, garden, etc
- a barrier or protection against something
- the act or a method of reducing the risk of financial loss on an investment, bet, etc
- a cautious or evasive statement
- modifier; often in combination low, inferior, or illiterate
a hedge lawyer
verb
- tr to enclose or separate with or as if with a hedge
- intr to make or maintain a hedge, as by cutting and laying
- tr; often foll by in, about, or around to hinder, obstruct, or restrict
- intr to evade decision or action, esp by making noncommittal statements
- tr to guard against the risk of loss in (a bet, the paying out of a win, etc), esp by laying bets with other bookmakers
- intr to protect against financial loss through future price fluctuations, as by investing in futures
Derived Forms
- ˈ岵, adjective
- ˈ岵Բ, noun
- ˈ岵, noun
Other Word Forms
- 岵l adjective
- ܲ·岵 verb (used with object) unhedged unhedging
- ܲ·岵 adjective
- ɱ-岵 adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of hedge1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hedge1
Example Sentences
As the vehicle came to a halt, 11 other men, all masked and armed, emerged from hedges around the road.
Denmark would break off relations with the U.S. and insist, with a certain amount of hedging, that this was an act of war, sort of.
Speculative traders, including hedge funds and asset managers, have increased their bets against the dollar in April.
He has produced a ludicrous tariff policy which every economist, hedge fund manager, CEO, small businessman and stock trader knows is virtually designed to cause inflation, if not stagflation and recession.
Globally, unpredictability pushes countries to hedge against the U.S.
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