duneland

English

Etymology

From dune +‎ land.

Noun

duneland (countable and uncountable, plural dunelands)

  1. Land where dunes are found.
    • 1955 November, Graham Dukes and Ineke Greup, “The Alkmaar & Bergen-aan-Zee Light Railway”, in Railway Magazine, page 780:
      From these towns, connections were provided in the early years of the century through the dunelands to the coastal resorts.
    • 2008 May 27, Charles Mcgrath, “At World’s End, Honing a Father-Son Dynamic”, in New York Times[1]:
      “A little fog, a little drizzle —— those are the good days,” Mark Forker, the movie’s director of special effects, remarked one morning in late April while the crew was shooting some of the final scenes in the book on a stretch of scraggly duneland by the shore of Lake Erie here.

Anagrams