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Dechmont Law is small volcanic plug on the North side of Livingston, South of Dechmont itself and the M8 motorway.

According to WJ Watson, Dechmont has possible Brythonic and Goidelic roots:
However, according to John Garth Wilkinson, the placename derives unproblematically from Brythonic teg ("fair") and mynydd ("mount"),[2] although a Latinised Brythonic of teg mont seems even likelier. Either way, several places around the hill still retain the name, from Nether Dechmont to the South, Wester Dechmont to the West, and Dechmont to the North.
Dechmont Law is the highest place in Livingston, and commands a surprisingly wide view across the Almond Valley out towards Arthur's Seat and the Pentland Hills to the East and South respectively. Ancient earthworks are noted both on the Ordnance Survey maps and in the CANMORE entry, but given the type and extent of the site, it seems highly likely that some form of defensive structure encircled the law in ancient times.

On both the West and East sides of the law, possible terraces are visible suggesting, perhaps, a hillfort on the summit at some point.

However, no significant features remain on the summit, and the designation of the site as a hillfort must remain to some extent conjectural.
Footnotes
[1] WJ Watson, Celtic Place-Names of Scotland (Edinburgh: 1926), p.400.
[2] John Garth Wilkinson, West Lothian Place Names (Harburn: 1992), p.18.
