Can you call a vegetable plot “a vegetable bed”?












12















Can you call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed"? Or is this usage uncommon?



For example a bed of flowers is called a flowerbed.










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  • 1





    Ngram shows both as in use, with "plot" used somewhat more frequently.

    – Cascabel
    yesterday
















12















Can you call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed"? Or is this usage uncommon?



For example a bed of flowers is called a flowerbed.










share|improve this question


















  • 1





    Ngram shows both as in use, with "plot" used somewhat more frequently.

    – Cascabel
    yesterday














12












12








12


2






Can you call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed"? Or is this usage uncommon?



For example a bed of flowers is called a flowerbed.










share|improve this question














Can you call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed"? Or is this usage uncommon?



For example a bed of flowers is called a flowerbed.







word-choice american-english terminology






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asked yesterday









HappyHappy

520415




520415








  • 1





    Ngram shows both as in use, with "plot" used somewhat more frequently.

    – Cascabel
    yesterday














  • 1





    Ngram shows both as in use, with "plot" used somewhat more frequently.

    – Cascabel
    yesterday








1




1





Ngram shows both as in use, with "plot" used somewhat more frequently.

– Cascabel
yesterday





Ngram shows both as in use, with "plot" used somewhat more frequently.

– Cascabel
yesterday










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















23














Yes, you can call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed", and this is not uncommon.



bed Merriam-Webster




: a flat or level surface: such as a : a plot of ground prepared for
plants also : the plants grown in such a plot




as in:




  • “The gardener planted a bed of roses”

  • “The gardener planted a bed of flowers”

  • “The gardener planted a bed of vegetables”

  • "The gardener planted a bed of vegetables and ornamental flowers”


These are all correct, as bed means a plot of ground in which plants are growing.



Examples:






  • Build Your Own Raised Flower/Vegetable Bed ThePioneerWoman









  • How to Build A Vegetable Bed Biodynamically MotherEarth








  • Build a Raised Vegetable Bed Denver Post







share|improve this answer





















  • 5





    @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

    – Deolater
    yesterday






  • 2





    @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

    – 1006a
    yesterday






  • 3





    @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

    – Mike Scott
    yesterday






  • 4





    @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

    – R.M.
    yesterday






  • 2





    I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

    – Darrel Hoffman
    yesterday



















12














Yes, you can, at least in UK usage. The Royal Horticultural Society refer to "vegetable beds" in their campaign for school gardening, for example.



They're not completely synonymous as you'll see from this description of my own garden: I have several veg beds, one strawberry bed, and two herb beds. They're island beds separated by paths and together make up the vegetable plot. The examples I've linked (along with the more common "raised bed") demonstrate that phrases of this form are quite flexible






share|improve this answer


























  • Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

    – Happy
    yesterday



















2














As a native British English speaker, I would call that a vegetable patch. Ngrams shows its more common than 'plot' or 'bed'.



'Vegetable bed' sounds wrong to me, despite published usages. I would know what you meant but I wouldn't use it myself.






share|improve this answer
























  • But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

    – Happy
    9 hours ago













  • 'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

    – Michael
    7 hours ago











  • When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

    – Happy
    7 hours ago











  • You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

    – Michael
    7 hours ago











  • In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

    – Happy
    7 hours ago



















1














The etymology for the word 'bed' is fascinating. Basically, it means a bunch of layers that are able to be penetrated. Penetrated with what? For a sea bed or garden bed? Water and/or plants. For a vascular bed? Blood. For the bed we sleep in? Us. We dig ourselves into the layers to sleep. Even for the verb 'to bed' someone, the metaphor seems to hold out.






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  • 1





    This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

    – jimm101
    6 hours ago



















-1














My impression, right or wrong, is that 'bed' is used only for small plots.
A large plot of a vegetable would be called a crop.
For animals; chickens for example; if small, a chicken coop. If large, a chicken farm.






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    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes








    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    23














    Yes, you can call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed", and this is not uncommon.



    bed Merriam-Webster




    : a flat or level surface: such as a : a plot of ground prepared for
    plants also : the plants grown in such a plot




    as in:




    • “The gardener planted a bed of roses”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of flowers”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of vegetables”

    • "The gardener planted a bed of vegetables and ornamental flowers”


    These are all correct, as bed means a plot of ground in which plants are growing.



    Examples:






    • Build Your Own Raised Flower/Vegetable Bed ThePioneerWoman









    • How to Build A Vegetable Bed Biodynamically MotherEarth








    • Build a Raised Vegetable Bed Denver Post







    share|improve this answer





















    • 5





      @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

      – Deolater
      yesterday






    • 2





      @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

      – 1006a
      yesterday






    • 3





      @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

      – Mike Scott
      yesterday






    • 4





      @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

      – R.M.
      yesterday






    • 2





      I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

      – Darrel Hoffman
      yesterday
















    23














    Yes, you can call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed", and this is not uncommon.



    bed Merriam-Webster




    : a flat or level surface: such as a : a plot of ground prepared for
    plants also : the plants grown in such a plot




    as in:




    • “The gardener planted a bed of roses”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of flowers”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of vegetables”

    • "The gardener planted a bed of vegetables and ornamental flowers”


    These are all correct, as bed means a plot of ground in which plants are growing.



    Examples:






    • Build Your Own Raised Flower/Vegetable Bed ThePioneerWoman









    • How to Build A Vegetable Bed Biodynamically MotherEarth








    • Build a Raised Vegetable Bed Denver Post







    share|improve this answer





















    • 5





      @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

      – Deolater
      yesterday






    • 2





      @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

      – 1006a
      yesterday






    • 3





      @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

      – Mike Scott
      yesterday






    • 4





      @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

      – R.M.
      yesterday






    • 2





      I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

      – Darrel Hoffman
      yesterday














    23












    23








    23







    Yes, you can call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed", and this is not uncommon.



    bed Merriam-Webster




    : a flat or level surface: such as a : a plot of ground prepared for
    plants also : the plants grown in such a plot




    as in:




    • “The gardener planted a bed of roses”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of flowers”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of vegetables”

    • "The gardener planted a bed of vegetables and ornamental flowers”


    These are all correct, as bed means a plot of ground in which plants are growing.



    Examples:






    • Build Your Own Raised Flower/Vegetable Bed ThePioneerWoman









    • How to Build A Vegetable Bed Biodynamically MotherEarth








    • Build a Raised Vegetable Bed Denver Post







    share|improve this answer















    Yes, you can call a vegetable plot "a vegetable bed", and this is not uncommon.



    bed Merriam-Webster




    : a flat or level surface: such as a : a plot of ground prepared for
    plants also : the plants grown in such a plot




    as in:




    • “The gardener planted a bed of roses”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of flowers”

    • “The gardener planted a bed of vegetables”

    • "The gardener planted a bed of vegetables and ornamental flowers”


    These are all correct, as bed means a plot of ground in which plants are growing.



    Examples:






    • Build Your Own Raised Flower/Vegetable Bed ThePioneerWoman









    • How to Build A Vegetable Bed Biodynamically MotherEarth








    • Build a Raised Vegetable Bed Denver Post








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 23 hours ago









    Andrew Leach

    79.7k8151256




    79.7k8151256










    answered yesterday









    lbflbf

    19.4k22270




    19.4k22270








    • 5





      @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

      – Deolater
      yesterday






    • 2





      @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

      – 1006a
      yesterday






    • 3





      @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

      – Mike Scott
      yesterday






    • 4





      @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

      – R.M.
      yesterday






    • 2





      I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

      – Darrel Hoffman
      yesterday














    • 5





      @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

      – Deolater
      yesterday






    • 2





      @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

      – 1006a
      yesterday






    • 3





      @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

      – Mike Scott
      yesterday






    • 4





      @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

      – R.M.
      yesterday






    • 2





      I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

      – Darrel Hoffman
      yesterday








    5




    5





    @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

    – Deolater
    yesterday





    @Happy For this American, a "yard" is a piece of land attached to a house. Usually there's a "front yard" and a "backyard" located in front of and behind the house, respectively. The yard (especially the front yard) may feature a "lawn", which is an area of trimmed grass. A "garden" is an area that is specifically cultivated for flowers or vegetables.

    – Deolater
    yesterday




    2




    2





    @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

    – 1006a
    yesterday





    @Happy You can ask another question if you want clarity about that (or search the site; I'm pretty sure it's been discussed here before) but basically, "yard" is any land around a house, and "garden" is an intentionally planted/cultivated part of the yard, of any size.

    – 1006a
    yesterday




    3




    3





    @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

    – Mike Scott
    yesterday





    @Happy “Plot” would be unusual in UK usage. “Bed” is the normal term.

    – Mike Scott
    yesterday




    4




    4





    @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

    – R.M.
    yesterday





    @Happy I wouldn't say plot and bed are necessarily the same thing. To me a bed is a smaller area entirely given over to cultivation. A footpath running through it wouldn't be part of a bed, and would likely split things into two beds. A plot can be larger, and could potentially include the footpaths. Also, a small field (e.g. 10x10 m) might be called a plot but wouldn't be called a bed. -- But all that might idiolect issues.

    – R.M.
    yesterday




    2




    2





    I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

    – Darrel Hoffman
    yesterday





    I think "plot" and "bed" are interchangeable in US English, but "garden" is not. A garden implies a larger area that may contain multiple plots or beds. E.g. "In my garden, I have a decorative flower bed around the outside and beds for tomatoes, peppers, and carrots in the middle"

    – Darrel Hoffman
    yesterday













    12














    Yes, you can, at least in UK usage. The Royal Horticultural Society refer to "vegetable beds" in their campaign for school gardening, for example.



    They're not completely synonymous as you'll see from this description of my own garden: I have several veg beds, one strawberry bed, and two herb beds. They're island beds separated by paths and together make up the vegetable plot. The examples I've linked (along with the more common "raised bed") demonstrate that phrases of this form are quite flexible






    share|improve this answer


























    • Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

      – Happy
      yesterday
















    12














    Yes, you can, at least in UK usage. The Royal Horticultural Society refer to "vegetable beds" in their campaign for school gardening, for example.



    They're not completely synonymous as you'll see from this description of my own garden: I have several veg beds, one strawberry bed, and two herb beds. They're island beds separated by paths and together make up the vegetable plot. The examples I've linked (along with the more common "raised bed") demonstrate that phrases of this form are quite flexible






    share|improve this answer


























    • Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

      – Happy
      yesterday














    12












    12








    12







    Yes, you can, at least in UK usage. The Royal Horticultural Society refer to "vegetable beds" in their campaign for school gardening, for example.



    They're not completely synonymous as you'll see from this description of my own garden: I have several veg beds, one strawberry bed, and two herb beds. They're island beds separated by paths and together make up the vegetable plot. The examples I've linked (along with the more common "raised bed") demonstrate that phrases of this form are quite flexible






    share|improve this answer















    Yes, you can, at least in UK usage. The Royal Horticultural Society refer to "vegetable beds" in their campaign for school gardening, for example.



    They're not completely synonymous as you'll see from this description of my own garden: I have several veg beds, one strawberry bed, and two herb beds. They're island beds separated by paths and together make up the vegetable plot. The examples I've linked (along with the more common "raised bed") demonstrate that phrases of this form are quite flexible







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    Chris HChris H

    17.4k43175




    17.4k43175













    • Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

      – Happy
      yesterday



















    • Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

      – Happy
      yesterday

















    Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

    – Happy
    yesterday





    Actually, now that I think about it, your explanation is the most clear one!

    – Happy
    yesterday











    2














    As a native British English speaker, I would call that a vegetable patch. Ngrams shows its more common than 'plot' or 'bed'.



    'Vegetable bed' sounds wrong to me, despite published usages. I would know what you meant but I wouldn't use it myself.






    share|improve this answer
























    • But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

      – Happy
      9 hours ago













    • 'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago











    • You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago
















    2














    As a native British English speaker, I would call that a vegetable patch. Ngrams shows its more common than 'plot' or 'bed'.



    'Vegetable bed' sounds wrong to me, despite published usages. I would know what you meant but I wouldn't use it myself.






    share|improve this answer
























    • But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

      – Happy
      9 hours ago













    • 'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago











    • You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago














    2












    2








    2







    As a native British English speaker, I would call that a vegetable patch. Ngrams shows its more common than 'plot' or 'bed'.



    'Vegetable bed' sounds wrong to me, despite published usages. I would know what you meant but I wouldn't use it myself.






    share|improve this answer













    As a native British English speaker, I would call that a vegetable patch. Ngrams shows its more common than 'plot' or 'bed'.



    'Vegetable bed' sounds wrong to me, despite published usages. I would know what you meant but I wouldn't use it myself.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 12 hours ago









    MichaelMichael

    1,665613




    1,665613













    • But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

      – Happy
      9 hours ago













    • 'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago











    • You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago



















    • But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

      – Happy
      9 hours ago













    • 'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago











    • You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

      – Michael
      7 hours ago











    • In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

      – Happy
      7 hours ago

















    But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

    – Happy
    9 hours ago







    But vegetable patch is not always the same as vegetable bed, e.g. you would not call a patch comprised of 5 beds a bed. What you're referring to is like saying, "I just compared the words "head" and "leg" on google ngram and "leg" is more popular, so I will use that". :D

    – Happy
    9 hours ago















    'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

    – Michael
    7 hours ago





    'patch' is a synonym of 'plot': a small piece of ground marked out for gardening, and you've already accepted that 'plot' is fine. Your head/leg example is not the same.

    – Michael
    7 hours ago













    When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

    – Happy
    7 hours ago





    When I was asking this question I thought that plot is the same as bed. But it turns out it is not.

    – Happy
    7 hours ago













    You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

    – Michael
    7 hours ago





    You've accepted an answer which says "you can call a vegetable plot a vegetable bed"

    – Michael
    7 hours ago













    In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

    – Happy
    7 hours ago





    In the question I call a vegetable plot a rectangular shaped, cultivated patch of soil that has no footpaths. Sorry, I should have been more clear.

    – Happy
    7 hours ago











    1














    The etymology for the word 'bed' is fascinating. Basically, it means a bunch of layers that are able to be penetrated. Penetrated with what? For a sea bed or garden bed? Water and/or plants. For a vascular bed? Blood. For the bed we sleep in? Us. We dig ourselves into the layers to sleep. Even for the verb 'to bed' someone, the metaphor seems to hold out.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

      – jimm101
      6 hours ago
















    1














    The etymology for the word 'bed' is fascinating. Basically, it means a bunch of layers that are able to be penetrated. Penetrated with what? For a sea bed or garden bed? Water and/or plants. For a vascular bed? Blood. For the bed we sleep in? Us. We dig ourselves into the layers to sleep. Even for the verb 'to bed' someone, the metaphor seems to hold out.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

      – jimm101
      6 hours ago














    1












    1








    1







    The etymology for the word 'bed' is fascinating. Basically, it means a bunch of layers that are able to be penetrated. Penetrated with what? For a sea bed or garden bed? Water and/or plants. For a vascular bed? Blood. For the bed we sleep in? Us. We dig ourselves into the layers to sleep. Even for the verb 'to bed' someone, the metaphor seems to hold out.






    share|improve this answer















    The etymology for the word 'bed' is fascinating. Basically, it means a bunch of layers that are able to be penetrated. Penetrated with what? For a sea bed or garden bed? Water and/or plants. For a vascular bed? Blood. For the bed we sleep in? Us. We dig ourselves into the layers to sleep. Even for the verb 'to bed' someone, the metaphor seems to hold out.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited yesterday

























    answered yesterday









    CarduusCarduus

    5936




    5936








    • 1





      This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

      – jimm101
      6 hours ago














    • 1





      This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

      – jimm101
      6 hours ago








    1




    1





    This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

    – jimm101
    6 hours ago





    This does not provide an answer to the question. To critique or request clarification from an author, leave a comment below their post. - From Review

    – jimm101
    6 hours ago











    -1














    My impression, right or wrong, is that 'bed' is used only for small plots.
    A large plot of a vegetable would be called a crop.
    For animals; chickens for example; if small, a chicken coop. If large, a chicken farm.






    share|improve this answer




























      -1














      My impression, right or wrong, is that 'bed' is used only for small plots.
      A large plot of a vegetable would be called a crop.
      For animals; chickens for example; if small, a chicken coop. If large, a chicken farm.






      share|improve this answer


























        -1












        -1








        -1







        My impression, right or wrong, is that 'bed' is used only for small plots.
        A large plot of a vegetable would be called a crop.
        For animals; chickens for example; if small, a chicken coop. If large, a chicken farm.






        share|improve this answer













        My impression, right or wrong, is that 'bed' is used only for small plots.
        A large plot of a vegetable would be called a crop.
        For animals; chickens for example; if small, a chicken coop. If large, a chicken farm.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 20 hours ago









        Scot ParkerScot Parker

        1




        1






























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