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Extended area (of land)
Answer for the clue "Extended area (of land) ", 5 letters:
tract
Alternative clues for the word tract
Word definitions for tract in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES a tract of land (= a large area of land ) ▪ Cattle ranching requires large tracts of land. vast areas/expanses/tracts etc (of sth) ▪ vast areas of rainforest COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE alimentary ▪ Free-living ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Tract \Tract\, n. [L. tractus a drawing, train, track, course, tract of land, from trahere tractum, to draw. Senses 4 and 5 are perhaps due to confusion with track. See Trace ,v., and cf. Tratt .] Something drawn out or extended; expanse. ``The deep tract ...
Usage examples of tract.
The significance of his tract has been changed by the death of Queen Anne and by his interest in presenting himselfas amartyr seeking his reward from his King and party.
Large tracts of country about here once laid out for arable are now converted into grazing grounds, for the number of cattle is yearly on the increase.
But what can they possibly have to do with why this forest tract on Athet is getting smaller?
They swarmed over the alluvial diggings directly gold was found, monopolising the auriferous tracts.
She pitilessly dosed them with her tracts and her medicine, she dismissed Creamer, she installed Rodgers, and soon stripped Miss Crawley of even the semblance of authority.
The area of the colony was 460,000 square miles, of which area 124,000 square miles were occupied by that singular aristocracy called squatters, men who rent vast tracts of land from Government for the depasturing of their flocks, at an almost nominal sum, subject to a tax of so much a head on their sheep and cattle.
And Dracunculus, the legendary fiery serpent, will cut a swath from digestive tract to epidermis, erupting from the skin in a blaze of necrotic glory.
As the enraptured Ichabod fancied all this, and as he rolled his great green eyes over the fat meadow-lands, the rich fields of wheat, of rye, of buckwheat, and Indian corn, and the orchards burdened with ruddy fruit, which surrounded the warm tenement of Van Tassel, his heart yearned after the damsel who was to inherit these domains, and his imagination expanded with the idea how they might be readily turned into cash and the money invested in immense tracts of wild land and shingle palaces in the wilderness.
His best drawing so far, done in ink and colored pencils and showing a cross section of the esophageal tract and the airways, was tacked to a rafter above the table.
One of them published a tract when he took himself away, exhorting my friends to be on their guard lest they should be led by me into anti-christian error.
I turned the Bumbler on Festina, I could see the germs in her lungs, her stomach, her digestive tract, her bloodstream.
Only Fimbria, in her heyday, had ever governed a tract of land so large, and the men who had had this awesome responsibility thrust so precipitately upon their shoulders were clerics, priests with no experience in governance.
With the aid of his yellow freesias he has invaded the file called Arnold and met a tract on human rights.
We encounter for example the rectus femoris, the saphenous nerve, the iliotibial tract, the femoral artery, the vastus medialis, the vastus lateralis, the vastus intermedius, the gracilis, the adductor magnus, the adductor longus, the intermediate femoral cutaneous nerve and other simple premechanical devices of this nature.
Wherefore, since supported by the goodness of the aforesaid prince of worthy memory, we were able to requite a man well or ill, to benefit or injure mightily great as well as small, there flowed in, instead of presents and guerdons, and instead of gifts and jewels, soiled tracts and battered codices, gladsome alike to our eye and heart.