Panhandle

From Free net encyclopedia

This is about the geographical term; when used as a verb, panhandle means to approach strangers and beg for money.

A panhandle is an informal geographic term for an elongated tail-like protrusion of a geo-political entity, such as a subnational entity or a sovereign state. The term derives from the analogous part of a cooking pan and its use is generally confined to the United States. A panhandle is similar to a peninsula in shape, but unlike a peninsula it is not surrounded by water on three sides and connected to a geographical mainland. Instead, a panhandle is delimited by a land border on at least one side and extends out from the larger geographical body of the administrative unit. The panhandle shape is the result of arbitrarily drawn international or subnational boundaries, although the location of some administrative borders takes into account other considerations such as economic ties or topography. In the United States, a protrusion with a less elongated shape is informally called a bootheel.

Panhandles in the United States:

Panhandles outside the United States

Outside of the United States, the term is not in common usage, with the arguable exception of the nearby New Brunswick Panhandle. Nonetheless, some English speakers will describe the following characteristic territorial protrusions elsewhere as a corridor, a panhandle, a handlebar, a tail or an arm extending into an administratively different territory:

See also

fr:Queue de poêle simple:Panhandle