valleyland

See also: valley-land and valley land

English

Etymology

From valley + land.

Noun

valleyland (plural valleylands)

  1. Land located in a valley.
    • 1909, Jack London, Martin Eden, Chapter 23,
      Love lay on the mountain-tops beyond the valley-land of reason.
    • 1954, C. S. Lewis, The Horse and His Boy, Collins, 1998, Chapter 12,
      It was a green valleyland dotted with trees through which he caught the gleam of a river that wound away roughly to the Northwest.
    • 1965, John Updike, Of the Farm, Random House, 2012, p. 34,
      [] a receding valleyland of blacks and purples where an unrippled river flows unseen between shadowy banks of grapes that are never eaten.

Alternative forms

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.