I would call it a picket fence.
They are often painted white.
A white picket fence around a garden would be a typical thing to find surrounding an English country cottage.
A wicket is found in a game of cricket.
What's a wicket fence? I know what a wicket is and I know what a fence is but the words don't want to match for me. Is it this?
http://awbsltd.com/shop/uploads/imag..._large/855.jpg
If so, why is it called that?
I would call it a picket fence.
They are often painted white.
A white picket fence around a garden would be a typical thing to find surrounding an English country cottage.
A wicket is found in a game of cricket.
Thanks, so it must have been a typo. I didn't know these upright wooden parts were pickets. Can any longer, pointy wooden thing be called a picket? I knew this word from military contexts.
Also, are the horizontal bars in the fence rails?
Not a teacher nor a native.
Everything would be okay, but I've seen the term "wicket fence" at the official website of Royal Comission of Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland:
Site Record for Inverkeithing Station, East Block With Wicket Fence South Bound Platform Details
"Wicket fence" is surely not a misspelling of "picket fence", for there is no way to press "w" instead of "p" on the keyboard, and "w" is totally different phoneme than "p"; if it would be a typo, I would rather say that the word misspelled was "wicker". But, considering aforementioned website, I believe it could be a synonym for "picket fence", which origin is still unknown for me.
Well, misspellings don't have to originate on the keyboard. They can come from the mind. And then, I agree that /p/ and /w/ are different (not totally though), but the words are very similar.
But your example does surely make the typo theory weaker... I did a google search and although the advantage of "picket" is huge, there are many hits for "wicket" too.
Well, there are two main causes of misspellings (I am purposedly omitting the case when the letter is doubling):
- keyboard typo - when two letters are near on the keyboard,
- pronunciation typo - when two letters sound alike (and that comes from the mind),
but none of them fits the case of picket/wicket. They are very simmilar, but that is not everything. I have never heard sounds "p" and "w" mispronounced; as you probably know "p" is a plosive, and "w" is a fricative. I can not really imagine a way to confuse them.
But - your question is very interesting, and if I will learn something about it, you'll be the first person to know it.
I agree, it's hard to imagine that. But I don't agree these are the only causes for misspellings. Our minds can err in amazing ways. My theory is this: generally and originally, it's a picket fence which is because it's made of pickets. But, picket fences are likely too have wickets too. And taking this into account it's much easier for me to imagine how some people could start mistaking one word for the other. They couldn't remember the exact name (bear in mind that both words are not among the most common) so they took the first one that sounded familiar and made at least a little sense.
Maybe you won't like to call such a process a misspelling. You might say it's mistaking one word for another. Well, that's not so important.
That's just a theory which can well be proven false. Anyway, it is very interesting to me too. Call me a word freak if you want...![]()
You've missed another cause: you make a typo, you get the red squiggly line under it, and your right click and pick one of the ones offered -- but you pick the wrong one.
I've done that with some pretty entertaining results.
So the person originally typed, say, oicket. The red lines appear. You click on the wrong spot - you choose wicket, or even ticket, instead of picket. You don't notice and keep moving on.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.