释义 |
Definition of inland in English: inlandadjective ˈɪnlandˈɪnləndˈinˌland 1Situated in the interior of a country rather than on the coast. the inland port of Gloucester Example sentencesExamples - Double-crested Cormorants are common year round, both on the coast and on inland waters of western Washington.
- In addition, some power plants discharge warm water into inland channels, creating more temperate oases for manatees.
- During winter Horned Grebes are a very common visitor on the coast, in Puget Sound, and in other inland marine waters.
- From its ramparts and towers, they could see and control all movements from the coast to inland cities.
- In Spain, we have lost thousands of pretty inland river coasts, which some years ago everyone could enjoy.
- That's because more than 70,000 people were counted on merchant sea-going and coasting boats, inland barges and boats as well as naval vessels when the census was taken.
- Inland waterways and inland ports have also been included in the definition of infrastructure and given associated fiscal incentives of tax holiday.
- They are also found in wet, plowed fields and grassy meadows near the coast and on inland marine waters.
- This creeper is found naturally in the summer rainfall areas from the coast to the inland mountains.
- Its ports, from Aden in the west to Sayhut and al-Ghayda in the east, are connected with the inland regions rather than with one another.
- He also experienced the trials of growing cool-season grasses using effluent water in a hot inland climate.
- Transport along the coast and to inland areas used to be difficult for much of the year.
- There is an abundance of game and semi-game fish in the rivers, inland water bodies and the seas off the State, the aficionados say.
- Many pterosaurs hunted fish, like spinosaurs did, so they would have been present in the same habitats - near coasts or inland bodies of water.
- Although sea breezes kept the coast more comfortable, inland areas baked in 12 to 13 hours of unbroken sunshine.
- Most water birds linger along the shallow shoreline of lakes, temporary waters in the inland ecosystems and rivers and very few venture far away from shore.
- Fish was plentiful along the Atlantic coast, whereas inland areas produced lamb and poultry as well as honey.
- There's a species for just about every region, from the coast to inland valleys, mountains, and deserts.
- He tackles the question of why settlements would only have been established on the coasts, with no inland traces of civilisation.
- During winter, Pacific Loons can be found off the coast and in inland marine waters, such as the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
Synonyms interior, non-coastal, central, inshore, internal, upcountry - 1.1British attributive Carried on within the limits of a country; domestic.
a network of waterways that allowed inland trade Example sentencesExamples - Today the track is used mainly by large trucks who carry supplies for the small population of inland stations or cattle back to the south.
- Yet in England, after the mid-twelfth century, water traffic on inland waterways failed to grow with the remarkable growth of inland trade which now took place.
- To pursue inland trade, living off the land was necessary.
- The development of the turnpikes would not have been possible without a great expansion of inland consumption, trade, and capital.
- Control of the inland trade slipped from these Natives to employees of the Company who established direct connections to the tribes of the plain.
- Foreign produce brought profits to distributors involved in inland trade.
- This international trade founded inland commerce between Yolngu and other Aboriginal people.
- Their activities stimulated and maintained the coastal and inland transport infrastructure at the local level, and facilitated the growth of trade and enterprise.
- Although the coastal and inland trades remained protected from foreign competition, the railroads soon captured most of their markets.
- The York post indent was particularly important as York was the port for most of the inland trade.
- This was followed in 1876 by the Chefoo Convention which opened more ports, arranged for inland trade with British Burma and local taxes on commerce.
- In terms of the bill, legal interest will be recoverable for non-compliance with the fixed time limits for inland money transfers.
Synonyms domestic, internal, home, local
adverb ɪnˈlandˈɪnlandˈɪnləndˈinˌland In or towards the interior of a country. the path turned inland and met the road Example sentencesExamples - Stewart travels inland a bit for his last two choices.
- At Waddell Valley, within Big Basin, you can hike inland alongside Waddell Creek.
- In terms of turning rivers inland and making more dams, I think we've done that before, and we've made mistakes and we generally regret it.
- Katrina pushed the Gulf of Mexico's waters far inland, producing destructive storm surges 25 feet high.
- So, I turned back inland just east of the advancing clouds.
- Also, the majority of hawks live inland, rather than on the coast.
- Seaplanes land, lumber is hauled in, oil is pumped onto ships, and trailer-trucks and trains carry off loaded containers headed inland.
- This occurs when relatively moist maritime air is carried inland at levels above the surface.
- It was then that the driver decided to drive inland and then took the tourists to the capital Colombo.
- Just prior to the Southern textile boom, industrialization in South Carolina seemed concentrated along the coast, rather than inland.
- Silverdale lies further inland but within the same Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty that encompasses Arnside.
- In the late 1800s, Portuguese and Muslim traders moved further inland and established trade with tribes.
- The breeze turned inland, carrying the salt water smell into the woodland on the island's eastern tip.
- Well, these aquarium dolphins were moved inland from the coast to a hotel pool last night in Gulf Port, Mississippi.
- For example, Day says, the canals that connect the city to the coast allow storm surges to travel inland, bringing salt water that damages the land.
- As the wind sweeps the warmer-than-air lake water, it collects moisture and carries it ten miles inland to a collision with Tug Hill.
- Freight containers were scattered everywhere, bobbing in the water or carried inland.
- He seemed to be everywhere, rallying hesitant soldiers and leading groups of men inland, despite German small arms, mortar and artillery fire.
- He swears disgustedly and turns inland, jaywalking across the bustling avenue, a gray-haired motorist squealing his brakes to miss him.
- If played inland the dew factor would come into play - the tournament will have stretched into March - with day/night games ruled out.
Synonyms towards the interior, away from the coast
noun ˈɪnləndˈɪnlandˈinˌland the inlandThe parts of a country remote from the sea or frontiers; the interior. Example sentencesExamples - Hundreds of thousands of Australians have opted to move outside the cities to the regions in the inland and along the coast to find a better balance between work and life.
- To suggest the issue will be solved by piping water from the coast to the inland is too simplistic and fraught with hidden future complications.
- However the return of dry conditions over the inland in the late spring (earlier in northern areas) allowed this abundant vegetation to dry out.
- Construction of this narrow gauge line started in 1878, at the hight of the railway boom, in the hope to develop the pastoral and mining potential of the inland.
- Since 1990, Husing notes, more than 660,000 people have moved into the inland.
- Returning to Australia and discovering the inland in a series of visits as a journalist, he idealised the virtues of the bushman.
- The preliminary damage reports show that we fared a little bit better in the inland of south Florida than we did with Hurricane Frances.
- His journalistic background sang forth as he spoke of dreams fulfilled, the true spirit of Australia reaching out to the inland.
- In the year of the outback, there is renewed attention on the survival of country towns, from the Tasmanian coast to the inland.
Derivatives noun ˈɪnləndə A recurring reference on the Internet in China is that northerners and inlanders are itching for a showdown with Taiwan, while southerners and coastal inhabitants, who have the most to lose in a war, are leery of confrontation. Example sentencesExamples - But the fish that reach the Pacific, even today, put on silvery muscle fast, and for the next two to three years travel distances that put every inlander but circumpolar birds and long-haul truckers to shame.
- It is obvious even to inlanders that serious forces are at play.
- This Saturday the inlanders will travel to the seaside to play Ballina in the second and final round of the Bardwell-Ellis trophy, with a single stableford at home.
Definition of inland in US English: inlandadjectiveˈinˌland 1Situated in the interior of a country rather than on the coast. the deserts of inland Australia Example sentencesExamples - This creeper is found naturally in the summer rainfall areas from the coast to the inland mountains.
- In addition, some power plants discharge warm water into inland channels, creating more temperate oases for manatees.
- From its ramparts and towers, they could see and control all movements from the coast to inland cities.
- There's a species for just about every region, from the coast to inland valleys, mountains, and deserts.
- There is an abundance of game and semi-game fish in the rivers, inland water bodies and the seas off the State, the aficionados say.
- Fish was plentiful along the Atlantic coast, whereas inland areas produced lamb and poultry as well as honey.
- He tackles the question of why settlements would only have been established on the coasts, with no inland traces of civilisation.
- That's because more than 70,000 people were counted on merchant sea-going and coasting boats, inland barges and boats as well as naval vessels when the census was taken.
- Most water birds linger along the shallow shoreline of lakes, temporary waters in the inland ecosystems and rivers and very few venture far away from shore.
- He also experienced the trials of growing cool-season grasses using effluent water in a hot inland climate.
- Inland waterways and inland ports have also been included in the definition of infrastructure and given associated fiscal incentives of tax holiday.
- Double-crested Cormorants are common year round, both on the coast and on inland waters of western Washington.
- Although sea breezes kept the coast more comfortable, inland areas baked in 12 to 13 hours of unbroken sunshine.
- During winter, Pacific Loons can be found off the coast and in inland marine waters, such as the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
- Transport along the coast and to inland areas used to be difficult for much of the year.
- During winter Horned Grebes are a very common visitor on the coast, in Puget Sound, and in other inland marine waters.
- They are also found in wet, plowed fields and grassy meadows near the coast and on inland marine waters.
- In Spain, we have lost thousands of pretty inland river coasts, which some years ago everyone could enjoy.
- Its ports, from Aden in the west to Sayhut and al-Ghayda in the east, are connected with the inland regions rather than with one another.
- Many pterosaurs hunted fish, like spinosaurs did, so they would have been present in the same habitats - near coasts or inland bodies of water.
Synonyms interior, non-coastal, central, inshore, internal, upcountry - 1.1British attributive Carried on within the limits of a country; domestic.
a network of waterways that allowed inland trade Example sentencesExamples - To pursue inland trade, living off the land was necessary.
- Control of the inland trade slipped from these Natives to employees of the Company who established direct connections to the tribes of the plain.
- This international trade founded inland commerce between Yolngu and other Aboriginal people.
- Their activities stimulated and maintained the coastal and inland transport infrastructure at the local level, and facilitated the growth of trade and enterprise.
- The York post indent was particularly important as York was the port for most of the inland trade.
- This was followed in 1876 by the Chefoo Convention which opened more ports, arranged for inland trade with British Burma and local taxes on commerce.
- Although the coastal and inland trades remained protected from foreign competition, the railroads soon captured most of their markets.
- Yet in England, after the mid-twelfth century, water traffic on inland waterways failed to grow with the remarkable growth of inland trade which now took place.
- Foreign produce brought profits to distributors involved in inland trade.
- In terms of the bill, legal interest will be recoverable for non-compliance with the fixed time limits for inland money transfers.
- The development of the turnpikes would not have been possible without a great expansion of inland consumption, trade, and capital.
- Today the track is used mainly by large trucks who carry supplies for the small population of inland stations or cattle back to the south.
Synonyms domestic, internal, home, local
adverbˈinˌland In or toward the interior of a country. the path turned inland and met the road Example sentencesExamples - This occurs when relatively moist maritime air is carried inland at levels above the surface.
- For example, Day says, the canals that connect the city to the coast allow storm surges to travel inland, bringing salt water that damages the land.
- In terms of turning rivers inland and making more dams, I think we've done that before, and we've made mistakes and we generally regret it.
- He seemed to be everywhere, rallying hesitant soldiers and leading groups of men inland, despite German small arms, mortar and artillery fire.
- The breeze turned inland, carrying the salt water smell into the woodland on the island's eastern tip.
- As the wind sweeps the warmer-than-air lake water, it collects moisture and carries it ten miles inland to a collision with Tug Hill.
- Seaplanes land, lumber is hauled in, oil is pumped onto ships, and trailer-trucks and trains carry off loaded containers headed inland.
- So, I turned back inland just east of the advancing clouds.
- Silverdale lies further inland but within the same Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty that encompasses Arnside.
- Well, these aquarium dolphins were moved inland from the coast to a hotel pool last night in Gulf Port, Mississippi.
- In the late 1800s, Portuguese and Muslim traders moved further inland and established trade with tribes.
- At Waddell Valley, within Big Basin, you can hike inland alongside Waddell Creek.
- It was then that the driver decided to drive inland and then took the tourists to the capital Colombo.
- Just prior to the Southern textile boom, industrialization in South Carolina seemed concentrated along the coast, rather than inland.
- Also, the majority of hawks live inland, rather than on the coast.
- Freight containers were scattered everywhere, bobbing in the water or carried inland.
- If played inland the dew factor would come into play - the tournament will have stretched into March - with day/night games ruled out.
- He swears disgustedly and turns inland, jaywalking across the bustling avenue, a gray-haired motorist squealing his brakes to miss him.
- Stewart travels inland a bit for his last two choices.
- Katrina pushed the Gulf of Mexico's waters far inland, producing destructive storm surges 25 feet high.
Synonyms towards the interior, away from the coast
nounˈinˌland the inlandThe parts of a country remote from the sea or borders; the interior. Example sentencesExamples - To suggest the issue will be solved by piping water from the coast to the inland is too simplistic and fraught with hidden future complications.
- Returning to Australia and discovering the inland in a series of visits as a journalist, he idealised the virtues of the bushman.
- Hundreds of thousands of Australians have opted to move outside the cities to the regions in the inland and along the coast to find a better balance between work and life.
- His journalistic background sang forth as he spoke of dreams fulfilled, the true spirit of Australia reaching out to the inland.
- Since 1990, Husing notes, more than 660,000 people have moved into the inland.
- In the year of the outback, there is renewed attention on the survival of country towns, from the Tasmanian coast to the inland.
- The preliminary damage reports show that we fared a little bit better in the inland of south Florida than we did with Hurricane Frances.
- Construction of this narrow gauge line started in 1878, at the hight of the railway boom, in the hope to develop the pastoral and mining potential of the inland.
- However the return of dry conditions over the inland in the late spring (earlier in northern areas) allowed this abundant vegetation to dry out.
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