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weald

[ UK /wˈiːld/ ]
NOUN
  1. an area of open or forested country

How To Use weald In A Sentence

  • I'd say name it except for your second point, that named Wealden brachiosaurids are plentiful and once better material is described, some would near certainly be synonymized. ‘Angloposeidon’, the unreported story, part IV
  • For the Downland, sheep remained dominant; it was in the coastal plain and Weald that a new impetus was given.
  • Wenger protests that his player is innocent of the charges against him, though the fact that Fábregas chooses to wear a vest will lead many to conclude that he is attempting to conceal the boiling weald of the succubus from a vigilant public. Why the witch-hunt against Cesc Fábregas gets my goat | Harry Pearson
  • Set high on the Weald with views towards Romney Marsh, the 90-acre property was a rather neglected spread with a pretty tile-hung house, a straggle of outbuildings and no garden to speak of.
  • IN THIS year Cynewulf and the councillors of the West Saxons deprived Sigeberht of his kingdom because of his unjust acts, except for Hampshire; and he retained that until he killed the ealdorman who stood by him longest; and then Cynewulf drove him into the Weald, and he lived there until a swineherd stabbed him to death by the stream at Privett, and he was avenging Ealdorman Cumbra. The Early Middle Ages 500-1000
  • The past falls open unexpectedly, and its wider accretions and effacements – the lost forest of Andredesleage, the iguanodon bones Gideon Mantell discovered in the Wealden sandstone, the Piltdown Man forgery a century later – loom over the landscape she walks through. To the River: A Journey Beneath the Surface by Olivia Laing – review
  • For the Downland, sheep remained dominant; it was in the coastal plain and Weald that a new impetus was given.
  • The lush gardens are brimful with carved stoneware, unusual plants, fountains, and winding paths leading out into the open land of the Weald. The 10 best quirky campsites
  • Much Wealden woodland has been managed as coppice, often in combination with standard trees, principally oak.
  • A scorecard is the only record of the 1910 Leytonstone versus South Weald showpiece.
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