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alluvion
[ uh-loo-vee-uhn ]
noun
- Law. a gradual increase of land on a shore or a river bank by the action of water, whether from natural or artificial causes.
- overflow; flood.
- Now Rare. alluvium.
alluvion
/ əˈluːvɪən /
noun
- the wash of the sea or of a river
- an overflow or flood
- matter deposited as sediment; alluvium
- law the gradual formation of new land, as by the recession of the sea or deposit of sediment on a riverbed
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of alluvion1
Example Sentences
The alluvial soil is, of course level, and the swamps, which are only inundated alluvions, are dead flats.
The trees observed on the diluvial elevations were oaks, sassafras, and, on the best lands, walnut, but of sparse growth; with a dense forest of cotton-wood, sycamore, and elm, on the alluvions.
The parishes north of lake Pontchartrain, which formerly made a part of Florida, with the exception of some few tracts, and the alluvions of Pearl river and Bogue Chitte, have a sterile soil.
The Pacific and Atlantic coast strips, even the great but bleak valley of the St. Lawrence, are mere incidents of territorial unity and political control when compared with the great alluvion of the Mississippi.
The alluvion of political corruption has submerged this path of duty and safety.
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