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[ US /ˈɫɑk/ ]
NOUN
  1. a long narrow inlet of the sea in Scotland (especially when it is nearly landlocked)
  2. Scottish word for a lake

How To Use loch In A Sentence

  • A 'the time we lay there it lowped and flang and capered and span like a teetotum, and whiles we could hear it skelloch as it span. David Balfour, a sequel to Kidnapped.
  • A solid snake of people still wound back along the north shore of the loch.
  • A delectable path, for example, runs up behind the cemetery, bordered by butterfly orchids and lithospermum and aristolochia and other plants worthy of better names; it winds aloft, under shady chestnuts, with views on either side. Alone
  • The other cheese beloved in Savoie, the smelly, oozing reblochon, is the star of a Savoyard specialty: the famous tartiflette. Savoie the Fair
  • Flanagan and McCulloch were co-writers on the television series 'Sleepers'.
  • Isn't there something revolting about catering to the imagined needs of a tiny group of spoiled ladies, a Marie Antoinette–ish situation that reached its apotheosis when John Galliano showed his infamous clochard collection—the word means bum or hobo in French, and the tattered gowns, hand-stenciled to look filthy, trailed pots, pans, and other refuse—at the 1997 Dior haute couture show? Art in the Parks 3: Nan Kempner's Clothing
  • `Yeah... me... me friend Mr Ilochina, him don buy ` im own house. GWENDOLEN
  • It was a breezy morning, the wind sending washboard ripples across the loch. CHAMELEON
  • Add the lardons, potatoes and reblochon. Times, Sunday Times
  • At the office I decided to bring Arnie Bloch up to date with my latest information about the Finnegans. A CONVICTION OF GUILT
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