machair

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English[edit]

Machair

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Scottish Gaelic machair.

Noun[edit]

machair (countable and uncountable, plural machairs)

  1. (geology) A type of calcareous sandy terrain formed mostly from seashells, found by the coast in areas of Scotland and Ireland.
    • 2023 February 24, “Bones under Highlands kitchen floor are Iron Age burial site”, in BBC News[1]:
      Burials had been found north and south of Applecross, preserved in the soils of sandy coastal meadows known as machair.

Anagrams[edit]

Scottish Gaelic[edit]

Noun[edit]

machair m or f (genitive singular macharach or machrach, plural machraichean)

  1. (geography) extensive low-lying fertile plain, level country
  2. (geography) the southern or low-lying parts of Scotland
  3. (geography) extensive beach
  4. (geography) low and level part of a farm
  5. (geography, in the plural) long ranges of sandy plains fringing the Atlantic side of the Outer Hebrides

Derived terms[edit]