landlocked
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From land + locked (i.e. "locked-in by land on all sides").
Pronunciation
[edit]- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈlændlɑkt/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈlændlɒkt/
- Hyphenation: land‧locked
Adjective
[edit]landlocked (not comparable)
- (of a country, geographical region, etc.) Surrounded by land (having no borders with the sea).
- Switzerland is landlocked and obviously will never be a great sea power and must always trade overland.
- 2020, Eunice Mei Feng Seng, Resistant City: Histories, Maps and the Architecture of Development[1], , →ISBN, →OCLC, page [2], columns 1, 2:
- Located in Kowloon, with an area of 9.36 km², Wong Tai Sin is the only district in Hong Kong that is totally landlocked. It has a population of 420,183 (2011) and a high density of 44.891/km².
- Living in freshwater, such as landlocked salmon.
- (US, real estate, of a property or parcel) Surrounded by other property and having no access to a public road.
- 2005, Washington Legislative Reference Bureau, State of Wisconsin Blue Book, 2005-2006[3], page 610:
- An easement of necessity, said the court, may be provided when property is landlocked and the owner needs access to that property from a public highway.
- 2005, Thomas J. McEvoy, Owning and Managing Forests: A Guide to Legal, Financial, and Practical Matters[4], page 49:
- In some states, the law allows for easements by necessity, especially in circumstances where a property is landlocked.
- 2006, Real Estate Principles[5], Rockwell publishing, page 114:
- For example, if a property is landlocked (entirely surrounded by other privately owned land) and has no access to a public street...
Translations
[edit]surrounded by land
|
living in freshwater
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having no access to a public road
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See also
[edit]- (having no access to a public road): easement, ransom strip
References
[edit]- “landlocked”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.