Courtesy : Bachelor of Science Forestry (Botany, Zoology, forestry) Technology
Etymology
Since the 13th century, the Niepołomice Forest in Poland has had special use and protection. In this view from space, different coloration can indicate different functions.
The word forest derives from the Old French forest (also forès), denoting “forest, vast expanse covered by trees”; forest was first introduced into English as the word denoting wild land set aside for hunting without necessarily having trees on the land. Possibly a borrowing, probably via Frankish or Old High German, of the Medieval Latin foresta, denoting “open wood”, Carolingian scribes first used foresta in the capitularies of Charlemagne, specifically to denote the royal hunting grounds of the king. The word was not endemic to the Romance languages, e.g., native words for forest in the Romance languages derived from the Latin silva, which denoted “forest” and “wood(land)” (cf. the English sylva and sylvan; the Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese selva; the Romanian silvă; the Old French selve). Cognates of forest in Romance languages—e.g., the Italian foresta, Spanish and Portuguese floresta, etc.—are all ultimately derivations of the French word. # ISO certification in India
A forest near Vinitsa, North Macedonia
The precise origin of Medieval Latin foresta is obscure. Some authorities claim the word derives from the Late Latin phrase forestam silvam, denoting “the outer wood”; others claim the word is a latinisation of the Frankish *forhist, denoting “forest, wooded country”, and was assimilated to forestam silvam, pursuant to the common practice of Frankish scribes. The Old High German forst denoting “forest”; Middle Low German vorst denoting “forest”; Old English fyrhþ denoting “forest, woodland, game preserve, hunting ground” (English frith); and Old Norse fýri, denoting “coniferous forest”; all of which derive from the Proto-Germanic *furhísa-, *furhíþija-, denoting “a fir-wood, coniferous forest”, from the Proto-Indo-European *perkwu-, denoting “a coniferous or mountain forest, wooded height” all attest to the Frankish *forhist.# ISO certification in India
Uses of forest in English to denote any uninhabited and unenclosed area are presently considered archaic. The Norman rulers of England introduced the word as a legal term, as seen in Latin texts such as the Magna Carta, to denote uncultivated land that was legally designated for hunting by feudal nobility (see Royal Forest).
These hunting forests did not necessarily contain any trees. Because that often included significant areas of woodland, “forest” eventually came to connote woodland in general, regardless of tree density. By the beginning of the fourteenth century, English texts used the word in all three of its senses: common, legal, and archaic. Other English words used to denote “an area with a high density of trees” are firth, frith, holt, weald, wold, wood, and woodland. Unlike forest, these are all derived from Old English and were not borrowed from another language. Some present classifications reserve woodland for denoting a locale with more open space between trees, and distinguish kinds of woodlands as open forests and closed forests, premised on their crown covers. Finally, sylva (plural sylvae or, less classically, sylvas) is a peculiar English spelling of the Latin silva, denoting a “woodland”, and has precedent in English, including its plural forms. While its use as a synonym of forest, and as a Latinate word denoting a woodland, may be admitted; in a specific technical sense it is restricted to denoting the species of trees that comprise the woodlands of a region, as in its sense in the subject of silviculture. The resorting to sylva in English indicates more precisely the denotation that the use of forest intends.# ISO certification in India