i Register
In some senses, zeriba is marked as historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.
ADJ.
arabic, kind
PREP.
in
noun
A fence of the type once commonly improvised in northeastern Africa from thornbushes.
On the left shore two neat farmyards shew themselves in a shining seriba of reeds, the stalks of which are connected very regularly with each other, but perhaps only afford resistance to tame animals.
1895, A. H. Keane, Africa, Volume I, North Africa, (Stanford’s Compendium of Geography and Travel), London: Edward Stanford, Chapter 5, p. 245, footnote 1, In Arabic zeriba means any kind of rough and ready fenced enclosure; hence the expression “zeriba country” applied by some geographers to the northern slope of the Nile-Congo divide, where the Arab traders and slave-hunters had founded numerous palisaded stations long before the establishment of the Egyptian administration in that region.
An improvised stockade, particularly those similarly located and constructed.
The Black Watch (Royal Highlanders) advanced this morning to Baker Pasha’s zariba.
I clutched at a gun - my pockets were full of cartridges - and, parting the thorn bushes at the gate of our zareba, quickly slipped out.
A camp of troops employing such an enclosure.
[…] forming a zariba, or square, to resist cavalry.
Any wild and barbed barrier, evocative of a briar or thorn patch.
Once you had passed the initial zareba of fruit stands, souvenir stands, ice-cream stands, and the lair of the enthusiast whose aim in life it was to sell you picture postal-cards, and had won through to the long walk where the seats were, you were practically alone with Nature.
[…] a small withered soldier sat by the prison door with a gun between his knees and the shadows of the palms pointed at him like a zareba of sabres.
verb
To erect or take refuge within a zeriba.
[…] the Brigadier ordered the force to zereba on the best position that was near.
On the 2nd of June a small force, zeribaed under Captain Malcolm McNeill, was attacked by the mullah’s followers but repulsed after desperate fighting.
On the left shore two neat farmyards shew themselves in a shining seriba of reeds, the stalks of which are connected very regularly with each other, but perhaps only afford resistance to tame animals.
Wiktionary1895, A. H. Keane, Africa, Volume I, North Africa, (Stanford’s Compendium of Geography and Travel), London: Edward Stanford, Chapter 5, p. 245, footnote 1, In Arabic zeriba means any kind of rough and
WiktionaryThe Black Watch (Royal Highlanders) advanced this morning to Baker Pasha’s zariba.
Wiktionary[…] the Brigadier ordered the force to zereba on the best position that was near.
WiktionaryOn the 2nd of June a small force, zeribaed under Captain Malcolm McNeill, was attacked by the mullah’s followers but repulsed after desperate fighting.
Wiktionaryi Register
In some senses, zeriba is marked as historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.