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    What does the expression 'hiving out' mean?

    Question #14480. Asked by KJ. (Nov 12 01 7:46 PM)


    The Gorm

    Don't know about hiving out but to hive off means to remove from a larger unit or group; form into or assign (work) to a subsidiary department or company; denationalize or privatize (an industry, etc.) (OED)

    Nov 12 01, 7:59 PM
    Senior Moments

    In colonial New England, it meant leaving a town when the rules or the neighbours were not to one's liking and settling somewhere else.
    http://www.usahistory.com/trivia/historical/hg.htm

    Nov 13 01, 12:13 PM
    tenformfist

    A quote from James Howard Kunstler's book, "The Geography of Nowhere":

    Typically, an early Massachusetts town was organized with individually owned home lots around a fenced common used to pen livestock. Townships were granted whole congregations who crossed the ocean as a group, bringing with them highly localized customs and farming practices. There if a minority couldn't abide the way a town was run, they could resolve their problem by "hiving out" to some unsettled area, always in a group, and creating a way of life with which they were at ease.

    Kunstler, The Geography of Nowhere, page 20
    Cited to Kostof, America by Design, page 297

    Oct 12 07, 5:57 PM


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