champian
English
Etymology
Variant form of champaign.
Noun
champian (plural champians)
- A plain; a flat expanse of land; a champaign.
- A species of landscape that is flat and open.
- The level open countryside, as distinct from the mountains, forests or towns.
- (agriculture) common land; land that is not enclosed
- Someone who farms land that is not enclosed.
- A battlefield, especially when flat and open.
- A field of inquiry or study.
Translations
flat expanse of land — see plain
species of landscape — see plain
level open countryside — see plain
agriculture: common land — see common land
someone who farms land that is not enclosed
battlefield — see battlefield
field of inquiry or study — see field
Adjective
champian (not comparable)
- (obsolete) Flat and open, like a champaign.
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, VI.4:
- Him selfe out of the forest he did wynd, / And by good fortune the plaine champion wonne […].
- 1652, George Sandys, Sandys Travailes: containing a history of the Originall an ..., page 21:
- The countrey above, is champian and not barren,- but rarely inhabited.
- 1703, Daniel Whitby, A paraphrase and commentary on the New Testament:
- The lower, which contained the Tribes of Zcbulon and Iffachar, because it was Champian, was called the Great Field
- 1715, Guy Miege, Present State of His Majesty's Dominions in Germany, page 558:
- The Couutry in general is Champian, and low, but sometimes rises into pleasant Hills
- 1596, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, VI.4:
References
- “champian” in The Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989, →ISBN.
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