waste land in English

noun
1
an unused area of land that has become barren or overgrown.
It only comes out at the outskirts of the land where the barren wasteland ends and things begin to grow again.

Use "waste land" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "waste land" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "waste land", or refer to the context using the word "waste land" in the English Dictionary.

1. Look up 'The Waste Land' in the index.

2. Eliot's "The Waste Land"? You must be so Brooding and deep

3. Lying amid waste land to one side of the village, there rose the jutting silhouette of a cyclopean wall.

4. Eliot's Waste Land (19; the Cubist paintings of Picasso and Braque; and the 12-note music of Webern and Schoenberg.

5. 10 Lying amid waste land to one side of the village, there rose the jutting silhouette of a cyclopean wall.

6. Legal loopholes and loose enforcement mean that thousands of tons of poisonous waste land on African, Asian, and Latin- American soil.

7. We use four types of Biomass today—wood and agricultural products,solid waste, land˜ll gas and biogas, and alcohol fuels (like Ethanol or Biodiesel)

8. Eight years later, the 170,000 sq ft wide waste land adjoining the North side of the existing facility will accomodate a second building, for a total investment of almost 4 M$.

9. My last vivid Boyhood fright from books came when I was 15; I was visiting my uncle and aunt in Greenwich, and, emboldened by my success with 'The Waste Land,' I opened their copy of 'Ulysses.' The whiff of death off those remorseless, closely written pages overpowered me

10. Eliot famously wrote in his epic poem The Waste Land, "is the Cruelest month." There is a cosmic irony to the fact that "the Cruelest month" is also the month the Academy of American Poets chose to celebrate their art, a time when one sees a spike in poetry readings and programs.

11. ‘a park Abutting on an area of waste land’ ‘Exactly behind the new residential buildings Abutting the Opera House forecourt is the Tarpeian Way, but the public viewing platform is gone.’ ‘Her (now ex-) husband's family had been farmers on this part of the Chilterns for a couple of generations and the pub abutted their land.’