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    land
    [land]
    noun
    land (noun) · lands (plural noun) · the land (noun)
    1. the part of the earth's surface that is not covered by water, as opposed to the sea or the air:
      "the reptiles lay their eggs on land" · "after four weeks at sea we sighted land"
      Opposite:
    2. a country:
      "the valley is one of the most beautiful in the land" · "the lands of the Middle East" · "America, the land of political equality"
      • a conceptual realm or domain:
        "you are living in a fantasy land"
    3. the space between the rifling grooves in a gun.
    verb
    land (verb) · lands (third person present) · landed (past tense) · landed (past participle) · landing (present participle)
    1. put (someone or something) on land from a boat:
      "the lifeboat landed the survivors safely ashore"
    2. come down through the air and alight on the ground:
      "planes landing at the rate of two a minute"
      Opposite:
      fly off
      • bring (an aircraft or spacecraft) to the ground or the surface of water in a controlled way:
        "the copilot landed the plane"
        Opposite:
      • reach the ground after falling or jumping:
        "he leaped over the fence and landed nimbly on his feet"
      • (of an object) come to rest after falling or being thrown:
        "the plate landed in her lap"
      • informal
        (of something unpleasant or unexpected) arrive suddenly:
        "there seemed to be more problems than ever landing on her desk this week"
    3. informal
      inflict (a blow) on someone:
      "I won the fight without landing a single punch" · "I landed him one"
    Origin
    Old English land, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch land and German Land.
    -land
    [ˈland]
    combiningform
    1. forming nouns denoting a particular sphere of activity or group of people:
      "the blunt, charmless climate of technoland"
    Land
    [länd, länt, land, lant]
    noun
    Land (noun) · Länder (plural noun)
    1. (in Germany or Austria) a state.
    Origin
    German, literally ‘land’.
    Translate land to
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    An area of the earth usually inclusive of improvements, bodies of water, and natural or man-made objects and extending indefinitely upward and downward. : [Translation of land for other languages] Need more definitions? Love words?
    To alight upon a surface, as the ground, a body of water, or the like: You land on both feet when you jump. To hit or strike the ground, as from a height: The ball lands at the far side of the court. To strike and come to rest on a surface or in something: The golf ball lands in the lake.
    Definition of land noun from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary [uncountable] the surface of the earth that is not sea The new project will reclaim the land from the sea. on land It was good to be back on land. Some animals can live both on land and in water. by land We travelled by land, though flying would have been cheaper.
    Use the noun land to talk about the solid ground under your feet. It's nice to put your feet on dry land after a long trip in a sailboat. People who are afraid of flying are usually overjoyed to land on the land after hours in the sky — land is also a verb meaning "to settle down on the ground."
  3. Land Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

  4. LAND | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary

  5. LAND | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary

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  7. LAND Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com

  8. Land - definition of land by The Free Dictionary

  9. LAND | meaning - Cambridge Learner's Dictionary

  10. land noun - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes ...

  11. Land Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary

  12. Land - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com

  13. LAND definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary