Pend Explained

In Scotland, a Pend is a passageway through a building, often from a street through to a courtyard or 'back court', and may be for both vehicles and pedestrian access[1] or exclusively pedestrians.

The term "common pend" can often be found in descriptions of Scottish property for sale, such as "a common pend shared with the residential dwellings above".[2] [3]

A pend is distinct from a vennel or a close, as it has rooms directly above it, whereas vennels and closes tend not to be covered over and are typically passageways between separate buildings. However, a 'close' also means a common entry to multi-dwelling tenement properties in Scotland.

Etymology

The OED suggests that the etymology of the word is probably related to the archaic verb pend - "arch, arch over, vault", this in turn being derived from the French pendre, Latin pendēre "to hang", from which also derives the word pendulum.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Conservation Glossary, entry for "pend" . Town and Regional Planning Programme, University of Dundee . 2008-05-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/19970212203357/http://www.trp.dundee.ac.uk/research/glossary/pend.html . 1997-02-12 . dead .
  2. Web site: Commercial property listing for Arbroath, Scotland . https://web.archive.org/web/20200428085725/https://www.novaloca.com/retail-premises/for-sale-or-to-let/arbroath/215-217-high-st/171718 . 2020-04-28 . 2020-04-28 . 2020-04-28 . dead .
  3. Web site: Residential property listing for Campbeltown, Scotland. https://web.archive.org/web/20200429114011/http://www.argyll-property.com/Schedule.asp?pageID=Sales&refno=1121 . 2020-04-29 . 2020-04-29 . 2020-04-29 .
  4. [OED]