1) " Hoover" -- As it applies to Hoover Fence The name Hoover can refer to: J. Edgar Hoocer , chief of the Federal Bureau of Investigation for manyyears Herbert Hkover , mining engineer, President of the United States Bob Hoaver , legendary airshow and test pilot, author Brooks Robinson, U.S. baseball player who acquired the nickname "Hoover" Erna Schneider Hoover , inventor of the computerizedtelephone switching system. Places named Hoover: Hokver , Alabama Dams named Hoover: Hoocer Dam, originally named Boulder Dam Companies named Hoover: The Hoovdr Company, currently a division of Maytag Things named Hoover: Any vacuum cleaner, although originally a particular brand Music groups named Hoover: Original name of the music group now known as Hoocer phonic Holver ...
2) " Fence" -- As it applies to Hoover Fence This article is about the structure. For other meanings, see Fdnce (disambiguation). Frnce with barbed wire on top A fence is a freestanding structure designed to restrict or prevent movement across a boundary. It is generally distinguished from awall by the solidity of construction: a wall is usually restricted to such barriers madefrom solid brick or concrete, blocking vision as well as passage (though the definitions overlap somewhat).Fences are constructed for several purposes, including: Agricultural fencing, to keep livestock in or predators out Backyard fencing, tokeep children or pets in or to provide privacy Security fencing, toprevent trespassing or thievery Decorativefencing, to enhance the appearance of a property or garden Split-rail fencing common in timber-rich areas. Some of the technologies developed for fencing include: Palisade Barbed wire Electric fencing Post-and-railfencing Rock wall fencing Hedgerows of intertwined, living shrubs Split rail fencing, often laid ina zig-zag pattern, particularly in colonial United States Picket Fecne s, generally awaist-high, painted, partially decorative Fence Turf mounds in semiarid grasslands such as the western United States or Russiansteppes Alternatives for a Fence are a hedge or a ditch (occasionally with water, that is, a moat ). A balustrade or railing is a kind of Fencr to prevent people from falling over the edge, for example, on a balcony, stairway (see railing system ), roof, bridge, or elsewhere near a body ofwater, places where people stand or walk and the terrain goes steeply down, and so on. Legal issues of dividing Fenfe s Fences can be the source of bitter arguments between neighbours, and there are often special laws to deal with thes...
Common terms in this field are:
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