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Range of mountains   /reɪndʒ əv mˈaʊntənz/   Listen
Range of mountains

noun
1.
A series of hills or mountains.  Synonyms: chain, chain of mountains, mountain chain, mountain range, range.  "The plains lay just beyond the mountain range"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Range of mountains" Quotes from Famous Books



... River and the Chesapeake Bay to the Atlantic. 2. From Maryland along the crest of the Alleghany (perhaps the Blue Ridge) range of mountains, to some point on the coast of Florida. 3. The line from say the head of the Potomac to the west or north-west, which it will be most difficult to settle. 4. The crest ...
— Abraham Lincoln, A History, Volume 2 • John George Nicolay and John Hay

... abundance, and in many places crops out from the surface; and so is pure marble, both black and white. The same may be said of almost every metal except silver, which is scarce, and only to be obtained from a range of mountains ...
— Allan Quatermain • by H. Rider Haggard

... forth a mouse,"—as Horace has it, Montes laborabant et parturitur ridiculus mus,—shows that another concept was not unknown to the ancients. The Armenians call Mount Ararat "Mother of the World" (500. 39), and the Spaniards speak of a chief range of mountains as Sierra Madre. In mining we meet with the "mother-lode," veta, madre, but, curiously enough, the main shaft ...
— The Child and Childhood in Folk-Thought • Alexander F. Chamberlain

... cut through the range of mountains known erroneously as the Cascades, is about forty miles long, if we count from Lytton and Yale. In its narrowest part, at Hell Gate, a child may throw a stone across; and its current is tremendous. So rapidly does it run, that no boat can venture upon ...
— A Tramp's Notebook • Morley Roberts

... satisfy ourselves with a mere glance at the hills of Gilead; the rich pasture-lands of the tribe of Reuben, and formerly the kingdom of the gigantic Og, the monarch of Bashan. It is well known that the Valley of the Jordan is bounded on the east by a range of mountains still more lofty than those which skirt its western limits; but it was not suspected till lately that the former concealed in their recesses some of the richest scenery and most valuable land anywhere to be found in Palestine. Rising gradually from the bed of the river, the traveller ...
— Palestine or the Holy Land - From the Earliest Period to the Present Time • Michael Russell


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