badlands

[ UK /bˈædləndz/ ]
[ US /ˈbædˌɫændz/ ]
NOUN
  1. deeply eroded barren land
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How To Use badlands In A Sentence

  • With population exploding in inauspiciously stressed water zones across all continents including the deserts of the American southwest and Rocky Mountains' dry eastern slopes and their nearby badlands, the limits to growth from lack of it will soon come into sharp focus. Paul Gunther: Move to Detroit Quickly While There's Still Time
  • The scalloped rim presents a series of sheer walls ahead and behind, but to our left there is an utter falling away, a dropping and dropping until a dissected badlands finally looms up.
  • Springsteen often follows a songwriting strategy that dates back to songs such as ‘Badlands’, with verses full of travail, and choruses that ring with optimism.
  • I ask the ranger about hiking the volcanic badlands.
  • The planes replaced Harriers in the southern Afghan badlands last month. The Sun
  • He takes her deep into the desert badlands, knowing that the ruler's henchmen will stop at nothing to rescue her and bring her back.
  • The battalion has lost more than any other UK unit to fight in the Afghan badlands. The Sun
  • The reinforcement will take British numbers in the southern badlands to around 9,500. The Sun
  • Before her eyes lay leagues of the jagged, sharp, treacherous land that made up the badlands of the Northron Continent - a land as harsh and unfeeling as the people who populated it.
  • They reafforested a wide stretch of badlands.
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