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land of plenty

n. (context idiomatic English) A utopia that provides for all one's needs

Wikipedia
Land of Plenty

Land of Plenty is a 2004 drama film directed by Wim Wenders starring Michelle Williams and John Diehl.

The title of the film comes from the song "The Land of Plenty" from the album Ten New Songs written by Leonard Cohen and Sharon Robinson, which was used in the movie.

Usage examples of "land of plenty".

Fortunately this was a land of plenty, penguins and seals abounded, and everyone agreed that, apart from the labor, they were having a most enjoyable time, though no one imagined that the work would be useful.

Everyone partook of the cooking, and it was agreed without dispute that wherever they had come from, it was a land of plenty, for their flesh was sweet and uncorrupted.

No Pale-faces dwelt in the land of plenty (the translation of the Indian word 'Texas').

The Oversoul will fulfil her promises to you-that you will inherit a land of plenty, and your children will be a great nation.

The Oversoul will fulfil her promises to youthat you will inherit a land of plenty, and your children will be a great nation.

Thus a man had like to have starved to death in a land of plenty for the want of bullets or something to kill his meat.

Clearly a hero could not have proved his valour in a land of plenty peopled by divine and gracious beings, but he could have done so in a land of demons.

Wide rivers drained into it from a land of plenty, theirs for the taking.

What an ugly tragedy, that every day thousands of children die from the simple want of food, and millions more know the gnawing pain of hunger-while people like you, in a land of plenty, offer nothing but selfish excuses.

Now I had arrived in a land of plenty clothed in new flesh that was hungry for life.

Shall we lie out here and die of thirst and starvation with a land of plenty possibly only a few hundred yards away?

For many of these immigrants, the Ivory Coast had not turned out to be the land of plenty, or even of relative plenty, but a slum-magnet for an emptying countryside.