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Hebrides

[ US /ˈhɛbɹɪdiz/ ]
NOUN
  1. a group of more than 500 islands off the western coast of Scotland

How To Use Hebrides In A Sentence

  • The future will organize the exodus of whole villages, which, like those of the Hebrides in the last century, will bear with them to new worlds their Lares and Penates, their wives, families, and friends, who will lay out the church and the churchyard after the old fashion familiar to their youth, and who will not forget the palaver-house, vulgarly called pothouse or pub. Two Trips to Gorilla Land and the Cataracts of the Congo
  • The army of our liege lord is now in the Lothians, passing through them under the appellation of succors for the regent from the Hebrides! The Scottish Chiefs
  • In a discussion about worship recently in a manse in the Outer Hebrides, all present were asked to say what they wanted.
  • Ceilidhs, like American barn dances, are high-spirited social affairs with group dances and callers who help novices, like this young Scot in the Outer Hebrides' Castlebay, learn the steps.
  • In the Hebrides they shear their sheep later than anywhere else.
  • Sand dunes, including the machair on the Hebrides, some types of lowland lochs, fens, meadows, hedgerows and blanket bogs are all mentioned as habitats needing further protection.
  • We blackbirded from the New Hebrides and the Line Islands over to the westward clear through the Louisades, New Britain, New Ireland, and New Hanover. South Sea Tales
  • Stay in a bedroom suite here and you'll awake to a view stretching to the Outer Hebrides.
  • A lamb was seen headbutting a golden eagle who was trying to grab it, according to the Outer Hebrides bird report of 2009.
  • The Outer Hebrides is formed almost exclusively of rocks of the Lewisian Complex.
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