KLANG | • klang n. (Music) Any periodic sound, especially one composed of a fundamental and harmonics, as opposed to simple… • Klang prop.n. A surname. • Klang prop.n. A city in Klang District, Selangor, Malaysia. |
KLANGS | • klangs n. Plural of klang. • Klangs prop.n. Plural of Klang. • KLANG n. (German) a complex tone, composed of fundamental and harmonics. |
BACKLAND | • backland n. Land that lies behind or beyond some primary settlement or development. • BACKLAND n. a piece of land at the back of an established property. |
BOOKLAND | • bookland n. (Anglo-Saxon) In Anglo-Saxon society, land held by charter or written title, free from all fief, fee… • Bookland prop.n. (Informal) The notional "country" associated with a numeric country prefix allocated in the 1980s for… • BOOKLAND n. (Old English) in Old English law, land taken from the folkland or common land and granted by written charter to a private owner. |
DOCKLAND | • dockland n. The land area surrounding a dock, especially the renovated or gentrified areas surrounding a former dock. • DOCKLAND n. the part of a port occupied by docks. |
FOLKLAND | • folkland n. (Law, historical, UK) Land held in villeinage, being distributed among the folk, or people, at the pleasure… • FOLKLAND n. in Old English times, land held by folk-right, as opposed to bookland. |
LACKLAND | • lackland n. (Dated) A person who does not own land. • LACKLAND n. one who is wanting in land. |
PARKLAND | • parkland n. Land suitable for use as a park. • parkland n. (North America) A landscape characterized by a mixture of treed groves and open grasslands, akin to… • PARKLAND n. a cared-for area with lawn, trees and shrubs. |
BACKLANDS | • backlands n. Plural of backland. • BACKLAND n. a piece of land at the back of an established property. |
BLACKLAND | • blackland n. The land making up the Texas Blackland Prairies, a temperate grassland ecoregion in Texas with rich, dark soil. • BLACKLAND n. a heavy, sticky black soil such as that covering large areas of Texas. |
BOOKLANDS | • booklands n. Plural of bookland. • BOOKLAND n. (Old English) in Old English law, land taken from the folkland or common land and granted by written charter to a private owner. |
CHALKLAND | • chalkland n. Land in which the underlying geology is chalk. • CHALKLAND n. land composed of chalk. |
DOCKLANDS | • docklands n. An area of a town or city which contains, or used to contain, an industrial port. • DOCKLAND n. the part of a port occupied by docks. |
FOLKLANDS | • folklands n. Plural of folkland. • FOLKLAND n. in Old English times, land held by folk-right, as opposed to bookland. |
LACKLANDS | • lacklands n. Plural of lackland. • LACKLAND n. one who is wanting in land. |
PARKLANDS | • parklands n. Plural of parkland. • PARKLAND n. a cared-for area with lawn, trees and shrubs. |
BLACKLANDS | • blacklands n. Plural of blackland. • BLACKLAND n. a heavy, sticky black soil such as that covering large areas of Texas. |
CHALKLANDS | • chalklands n. Plural of chalkland. • CHALKLAND n. land composed of chalk. |
KLANGFARBE | • KLANGFARBE n. (German) tone-colour; timbre. |
KLANGFARBES | • KLANGFARBE n. (German) tone-colour; timbre. |