192 adjectives to describe tract

The word "round-up" is derived from the fact that during the winter months the cattle become scattered over a vast tract of land, and the ranchmen assemble together in the spring to sort out and each secure his own stock.

Formerly it covered extensive tracts in England, but has greatly disappeared before the genius of agricultural improvement.

He possessed, I cannot tell exactly how much, yet this I am certain of respecting it, that he owned an immense tract.

So great was her interest in Sabbath observance that she wrote a little tract on the subject.

Now and then one meets with a man in the dress of a factory worker selling newspapers, or religious tracts, or back numbers of the penny periodicals, which do not cost much.

Meantime he had purchased a considerable tract of land, embracing Pig and Sow Point, and including the Old Free Grace Meeting-House.

This morning we found the water in the well quite salt, in consequence of the tide having risen during the night; and as our horses required water, it was found desirable to fall back upon some of the fresh pools to form a camp, while a day or two could be devoted to the examination of this fertile and interesting tract of country.

The old man had even prevailed on him to leave it uncultivated, and the sight of that sterile tract intersecting the wavy greenery of the beautiful estate of Chantebled, like a spot of desolation, well pleased his spiteful nature.

Minor surgery of the urinary tract.

A few undulating hillocks diversify the surface of this sandy tract; but the ground is generally level and admirably qualified for the evolutions of cavalry, and also calculated to give the larger of two armies the full advantage of numerical superiority.

Myriads perish in the digestive tract of man and other animals.

Having dressed my new Fact in a respectable and scholarlike coat, I shall let him take his chance with the judicious public,and content myself, for the present, with making him a sort of humble colporteur of the valuable tract on Human Brotherhood of which I have herewith furnished a few dry specimens.

of the area under cultivation, and there are vast uncultivated tracts which the Jews can and will reclaim, as their numbers growboth by further colonisation and by natural increase, for the first generation of colonists have already proved their ability to multiply in the Promised Land.

They saw that Kavah directed the route of Feridún over the mountainous tracts and plains which lie contiguous to the banks of the Dijleh, or Tigris, close to the city of Bagdad.

Of a very different order to Chamberlayne's work is the remarkable tract which follows.

It is probable, that in process of time the narrow tract of land on the west of the Gulf of Mexico may be worn away by this elevation of water dashing against it, by which this immense current would cease to exist, and a wonderful change take place in the Gulf of Mexico and West Indian islands, by the subsiding of the sea, which might probably lay all those islands int one, or join them to the continent.

I have never seen, but greatly wish to see, Waterland's controversial tracts against Sherlock.

HERTZLER, MRS. A. E. Surgical pathology of the gastro-intestinal tract.

The effect of their construction, as we all know, is to give them the whole of the St. John, with all its tributaries, and a tract of territory south of that river equal at least to 75 miles square.

They have wasted enormous tracts of pine timber throughout the southern states.

Such situations the States of South Carolina and Georgia were inlarge tracts of the most fertile lands on the continent remained uncultivated for the want of population.

But hadn't we better be thinking of getting out of this soft marshy tract?"

This desert is known as the Rechna Doab, and until recently was waste government land, a barren, lifeless tract upon which nothing but snakes and lizards could exist, although the soil is heavily charged with chemicals of the most nutritious character for plants, and when watered yields enormous crops of wheat and other cereals.

From this, it may be inferred that sheep have always been indigenous to this hilly tract.

In the wild heathy tracts of the northern counties of England it is plentiful, also in Wales and the Highlands of Scotland.

192 adjectives to describe  tract