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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Gullied

Gully \Gul"ly\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Gullied; p. pr. & vb. n. Gullying.] To wear into a gully or into gullies.

Wiktionary
gullied

vb. (en-pastgully)

WordNet
gullied

See gully

gully
  1. n. deep ditch cut by running water (especially after a prolonged downpour)

  2. [also: gullied]

Usage examples of "gullied".

Maybe fertile once, it was eroded to gullied stone where farms must once have been.

Rifts of shattered masonry and strips of useless pavement showed through the thornbush, with most of the barren land eroded to gullied stone.

One whole side of the room was a gigantic cine-solidograph screen, on which the gullied desolation of a Martian landscape was projected.

The boat had circled over the Ganges, a mere trickle between wide, deeply cut banks, and was crossing a gullied plain, sparsely grown with thornbush.

From where he stood the ground fell sharply away in an almost sheer drop before it eased into a gullied slope running down to the sea.

They scanned the gullied slopes a full three kilometers ahead, noting small animals sleeping in burrows and the scaly, warm-blooded night-flyers of Plattner's World which curvetted in the skies above.

His frosty hair and beard were bound with the ice on that populous, knolled, and gullied plain.

Drops broke away with the help of gusts and they gullied down the glass.