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It holds back the water in Holland
Answer for the clue "It holds back the water in Holland ", 4 letters:
dike
Alternative clues for the word dike
Word definitions for dike in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dike \Dike\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Diked ; p. pr. & vb. n. Diking .] [OE. diken, dichen, AS. d[=i]cian to dike. See Dike .] To surround or protect with a dike or dry bank; to secure with a bank. To drain by a dike or ditch.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context British English) Archaic spelling of all (context British English) meanings of dyke. 2 A barrier of stone or earth used to hold back water and prevent flooding. 3 (context pejorative English) A lesbian, especially a butch lesbian. 4 (context ...
Usage examples of dike.
No datable objects have yet been discovered, and Hague Dike so far remains undated.
There were gobble-mole ditches druggled through the meadow, dirt thrown up on either side in little dikes, a shower of earth flying up from time to time to mark the location of the mole as it druggled for beetles and worms and blind snakes.
For outworks it had nothing more than an earthern dike, surrounded by a ditch that had once been full of sharpened stakes.
Mennonite preachers, he, here named never to be named again, inspects the dike tops, the enrockment and the groins, and drives off the pigs, because according to the Rural Police Regulations of November 1848, Clause 8, all animals, furred and feathered, are forbidden to graze and burrow on the dike.
Far under his feet the river was louder than usual, the enlarged flume thundering an increased flood down beyond the dam, while to the upriver the earthwork diversion dike had backed up increasingly deeper water, still water to all appearance, until it slipped violently down that chute and boiled among the rocks before it started its seaward course again.
There was a faint gleam of fire far down the path, that wound down to the site, the diversion dike, from which the big flume carried its thundering load toward the black mass of the dam and over.
Cursing, he leaped up, threw himself on Gair and rolled with him into the damp bushes beside the nearest dike.
Look steadily to the eastward of that second dike and you will see the pink light upon the sands, which baffled every one until our friend Hamel came and caught it on his canvas.
These side flows from dikes are termed laccolites, a word which signifies the pool-like nature of the stony mass which they form between the strata.
Trin lived a good way out on the dike in a little hut, and when the old woman did her chores in the house, this monster of a cat used to sit in front of the house door and blink into the summer day and at the peewits that flew past.
A great banquet, the first since the funeral banquet of old Tede Volkerst, was given in the house of the dikemaster, to which all the dike overseers and the greater landowners were invited.
Dicken saw that he had isolated a recombined variety of unencapsulated RNA virus from the blood and sputum of all the afflicted children, in titers sufficient to suggest massive infection.
The wall around Vyring was in the nature of a dike, not a fortification.
Jupiter will still be in good shape, though, and the Jovian magnetosphere has enough dikes to dampen out the worse of any particle floods the enemy might throw their way.
This process often has importance of an economic kind, for it not infrequently leads to the formation of metalliferous veins or other aggregations of ores, either in the dike itself or in the country rock.