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Catskills

[ US /ˈkætˌskɪɫz/ ]
NOUN
  1. a range of the Appalachians to the west of the Hudson in southeastern New York; includes many popular resort areas

How To Use Catskills In A Sentence

  • They left New York City in the late 1960s for a shaley piece of ground in the Catskills and began learning to grow and raise their own food. The Dirty Life
  • In general, deer harvests in NY are very high in western and central NY and lower in the Catskills and 'dacks; fairly good in areas of the Hudson Valley where there is still a lot of agriculture. If McCain Loses ...
  • To stand in a glade in the Catskills is to realize what a deeply troubling trade-off that is.
  • He plays the working-class dance instructor at a Catskills resort, while she's the college-bound teen entranced by his charms.
  • There seemed something more sensible about a society where mothers and children fled the city for the Catskills, the Hamptons, Maine, etc., while their husbands stayed behind in blissful, if sweat-stained, solitude, joining them on weekends or in August. Summers in Letters
  • Some in the Catskills, a few living in the carny towns in Florida. AMERICAN GODS
  • Greene could be the smallest on top of that to probably the most mountainous of every one of the Catskills County and is also situated north of Ulster.
  • As the warm, moist air hit the Catskills and other mountains, it was forced upward, what meteorologists call upslope flow. NYT > Global Home
  • But when the infrastructure for pumping natural gas out of the Catskills has finally been put in place, there will be no mistaking its impact, no missing the gaping holes in the forest canopy, the artificial ponds full of "fracking" fluid, the industrial damage done.
  • But when he met Sandra at a Memorial Day singles weekend in the Catskills in 1972, he was a recently certified 22-year-old health inspector for New York State.
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