Dictionary Definition
border
Noun
3 the boundary of a surface [syn: edge]
5 a strip forming the outer edge of something;
"the rug had a wide blue border"
Verb
1 extend on all sides of simultaneously;
encircle; "The forest surrounds my property" [syn: surround, skirt]
2 form the boundary of; be contiguous to [syn:
bound]
4 provide with a border or edge; "edge the
tablecloth with embroidery" [syn: edge]
5 lie adjacent to another or share a boundary;
"Canada adjoins the U.S."; "England marches with Scotland" [syn:
adjoin, edge, abut, march, butt, butt
against, butt on]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /bɔədə/ (Australia)
- /bɔːdə/ (RP)
- /bɔrdər/ (US)
- Rhymes: -ɔː(r)də(r)
Homophones
Etymology
From bordure.Noun
- The outer edge of something.
- a solid 1px border around a table
- A decorative strip around the edge of something.
- A strip of ground in which ornamental plants are grown.
- The line or frontier area separating political or geographical regions.
- Short form of border morris or border dancing; a vigorous style of traditional English dance originating from villages along the border between England and Wales, performed by a team of dancers usually with their faces disguised with black make up.
Translations
the outer edge of something
- Dutch: rand
- French: bord, bordure
- German: Grenze
- Hebrew:
- Italian: confine
- Norwegian: ytterkant, kant, rand
- Portuguese: borda, margem
- Russian: граница, край, кромка,
- Serbian: granica
- Spanish: borde
a decorative strip around the edge of something
- French: bordure
- Norwegian: bord
- Portuguese: orla
- Russian: кайма of clothes, бордюр of a road or oavement, фриз of a building
- Serbian: graničnik
a strip of ground in which ornamental plants are
grown
- Dutch: border
- Serbian: graničnik
the line or frontier area separating regions
- Arabic:
- Aragonese: muga
- Bosnian: granica
- Chinese: 国境 (guó jìng)
- Czech: hranice
- Danish: grænse
- Dutch: grens
- French: frontière
- German: Grenze , Gemerke
- Hebrew: גבול (gvul)
- Icelandic: landamæri
- Indonesian: perbatasan
- Italian: confine, frontiera
- Japanese: 国境 (くにざかい, kunizakai; こっきょう, kokkyō)
- Korean: 국경 (gukgyeong)
- Norwegian: grense
- Polish: granica
- Portuguese: fronteira
- Romanian: graniţă
- Russian: граница
- Serbian: granica
- Spanish: frontera
- Thai: (chaai daen)
- Yiddish: גרענעץ
Translations
(transitive) to put a border on something
- Danish: begrænse
- German: begrenzen
- Russian: ограничивать , ограничить
(transitive) to lie on, or adjacent to a border
- Danish: grænse
- German: angrenzen
- Russian: граничить
Derived terms
French
Pronunciation
Noun
border- to border
Conjugation
Extensive Definition
Borders define geographic boundaries of
political
entities or legal jurisdictions, such as governments, states or subnational
administrative divisions. They may foster the setting up of
buffer
zones. Some borders are fully or partially controlled, and may
be crossed legally only at designated crossing points.
In the past many borders were not clearly defined
lines, but were neutral zones called marchlands. This has been
reflected in recent times with the neutral zones that were set up
along part of Saudi
Arabia's borders with Kuwait and Iraq (however, these
zones no longer exist). In modern times the concept of a marchland
has been replaced by that of the clearly defined and demarcated
border.
For the purposes of border
control, airports
and seaports are also
classed as borders. Most countries have some form of border control
to restrict or limit the movement of people, animals, plants, and
goods into or out of the country. Under international law, each
country is generally permitted to define the conditions which have
to be met by a person to legally cross its borders by its own laws,
and to prevent persons from crossing its border when this happens
in violation of those laws.
In order to cross borders, the presentation of
passports and visas or
other appropriate forms of identity
document is required by some legal orders. To stay or work
within a country's borders aliens
(foreign persons) may need special immigration documents or
permits that
authorise them to do so.
Moving goods across a border often requires the
payment of excise tax,
often collected by customs
officials. Animals (and occasionally humans) moving across borders
may need to go into quarantine to prevent the
spread of exotic or infectious diseases. Most countries prohibit
carrying illegal drugs or endangered animals across their borders.
Moving goods, animals or people illegally across a border, without
declaring them, seeking permission, or deliberately evading
official inspection constitutes smuggling.
Border economics
The presence of borders often fosters certain economic features or anomalies. Wherever two jurisdictions come into contact, special economic opportunities arise for border trade. Smuggling provides a classic case; contrariwise, a border region may flourish on the provision of excise or of import–export services — legal or quasi-legal, corrupt or corruption-free. Different regulations on either side of a border may encourage services to position themselves at or near that border: thus the provision of pornography, of prostitution, of alcohol and/or of narcotics may cluster around borders, city limits, county lines, ports and airports. In a more planned and official context, Special Economic Zones (SEZs) often tend to cluster near borders or ports.Human economic traffic across borders (apart from
kidnapping), may
involve mass commuting
between workplaces and residential settlements. The removal of
internal barriers to commerce, as in France after the
French
Revolution or in Europe since the
1940s, de-emphasises border-based economic activity and fosters
free
trade.
Border politics
Political borders have a variety of meanings for those whom they affect. Many borders in the world have checkpoints where border control agents inspect those crossing the boundary.In much of Europe, such
controls were abolished by the Schengen
Agreement and subsequent European
Union legislation. Since the Treaty
of Amsterdam, the competence to pass laws on crossing internal
and external boders within the European Union and the associated
Schengen States (Iceland, Norway, Switzerland,
and Liechtenstein)
lies exclusively within the jurisdiction of the European Union,
except where states have used a specific right to opt-out (United
Kingdom and Ireland, which
maintain a common travel area amongst themselves). For details, see
Schengen
Agreement.
The United
States has notably increased measures taken in border control
on the
Canada–United States border and the
United States–Mexico border during its War on
Terrorism. Some have called the 3600-km (2000-mile) US-Mexico
border, "the world's longest boundary between a First World
and Third
World country."
Historic borders such as the Great
Wall of China, the Maginot
Line, and Hadrian's
Wall have played a great many roles and been marked in
different ways. While the stone walls,
the Great Wall of China and the Roman Hadrian's Wall in Britain had
military functions, the entirety of the Roman borders were very
porous, a policy which encouraged Roman economic activity with its
neighbors. On the other hand, a border like the Maginot Line was
entirely military and was meant to prevent any access in what was
to be World War
II to France by its
neighbor, Germany.
Image gallery
The following pictures show in how many different ways international and regional borders can be closed off, monitored, at least marked as such, or simply unremarkable.Berlin Wall
used to be one of the most famous guarded borders in the world.
Nicholas and
Greenbrier counties in West
Virginia, USA along a secondary
road. Notice the older stone survey markers a few meters behind the
modern highway sign.
References
See also
commons Border- Collection of pictures of European borders, mainly intra-Schengen borders
- http://www.culture-routes.lu/php/fo_index.php?lng=en&back=%252Fphp%252Ffo_index.php%253Flng%253Den%2526dest%253Dbd_ac_lst&dest=bd_ac_det&id=00002600Dissertation topic in architecture. Nicolas Pannetier and Simon Brunel travelled through a geographical incarnation of a border, which has disappeared today, between Swinoujscie et San Bartolomeo. They were interested in its physical and symbolical outcome with the aim to collect a memory of these spaces. 2006-2007. http://www.atelier-limo.eu
- Geopolitics
- List of land border lengths
- List of countries that border only one other country
- List of national four-country border sets
- List of national border changes since World War I
- Political geography
- Political science
- Talking Borders Queen's University Belfast online audio archive
border in Arabic: حدود
border in Aragonese: Muga
border in Bosnian: Granica (politička
geografija)
border in German: Politische Grenze
border in Spanish: Frontera
border in French: Frontière
border in Croatian: Državna granica
border in Korean: 국경
border in Indonesian: Perbatasan
border in Icelandic: Landamæri
border in Italian: Frontiera
border in Hebrew: גבול
border in Dutch: Grens
border in Japanese: 国境
border in Norwegian: Grense
border in Polish: Granica (geografia)
border in Portuguese: Fronteira
border in Romanian: Graniţă
border in Russian: Государственная граница
border in Slovenian: Državna meja
border in Turkish: Sınır
border in Ukrainian: Державний кордон
border in Yiddish: גרעניץ
border in Chinese: 国境
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Berlin wall, Japanese garden, Pillars of
Hercules, abut, abut on,
act drop, adjoin, alpine
garden, ambit, approach, approximate, arboretum, arena, asbestos, asbestos board,
backdrop, bailiwick, bamboo curtain,
bank, batten, be contiguous, be in
contact, beam, beat, bed, befringe, beginning, bind, binding, board, bog garden, border ground,
border on, borderland, borderline, borders, bordure, botanical garden,
bound, boundary, bounds, brim, brink, broadside, brow, butt, cheek, chop, circle, circuit, circumference, circumscribe, cloth, coast, communicate, compare, confine, confines, conjoin, connect, contour, cortex, coulisse, counterweight, covering, crust, curtain, curtain board, cyclorama, dado, decor, define, delineate, demesne, department, domain, dominion, door, drop, drop curtain, dry garden,
edge, edging, encircle, enclose, end, enframe, entrance, envelope, epidermis, exterior, external, extremity, facade, face, facet, featheredge, field, fire curtain, flange, flank, flat, flipper, flower bed, flower
garden, frame, frieze, fringe, front, frontier, frontier post,
garden, garden spot,
grape ranch, grapery,
hand, handedness, hanging, haunch, hem, hemisphere, herbarium, hip, hortus siccus, integument, iron curtain,
jardin, join, jowl, judicial circuit, jurisdiction, kitchen
garden, labellum,
labium, labrum, lap, laterality, ledge, lie by, limb, limbus, limit, limits, line, lineaments, lines, lip, list, many-sidedness, march, marches, marchland, marge, margin, marginate, mark off, market
garden, metes and bounds, multilaterality,
near, neighbor, orb, orbit, ornamental garden, outer
face, outer layer, outer side, outer skin, outline, outpost, outside, outskirts, pale, paradise, perimeter, periphery, pinetum, planking, precinct, profile, province, purfle, purl, quarter, rag, ragged edge, realm, rim, rind, rock garden, roof garden,
round, scene, scenery, screen, selvage, set off, shell, shore, shrubbery, side, side scene, sideline, siding, skin, skirt, sphere, stage screw, stand by,
sunken garden, superficies, superstratum, surface, surround, tab, tableau, tea garden, teaser, temple, termination, three-mile
limit, threshold,
top, tormentor, touch, transformation,
transformation scene, trench, trim, trimming, truck garden,
twelve-mile limit, unilaterality, vegetable
garden, verge, verge upon,
victory garden, vinery,
vineyard, wainscot, wainscoting, walk, wing, wingcut, woodcut