moors Sentence Examples

  1. The vast, desolate moors stretched endlessly before the solitary traveler.
  2. The wind howled across the barren moors, carrying with it the scent of peat and heather.
  3. The sheep grazed peacefully on the rugged moors, their bleating echoing through the empty landscape.
  4. Emily Brontë's novel "Wuthering Heights" is set on the wild and unforgiving moors of Yorkshire.
  5. The moorland was a place of mystery and folklore, where strange lights and eerie noises were said to haunt the nights.
  6. The boggy terrain of the moors made it treacherous to cross, especially after heavy rainfall.
  7. The ancient stone circles scattered across the moors hinted at a long-forgotten civilization.
  8. The purple heather bloomed in abundance on the moors, transforming the landscape into a sea of color.
  9. Wildlife such as grouse, curlews, and lapwings thrived in the isolated habitat of the moors.
  10. The moors provided a sanctuary for those seeking escape from the bustle of modern life.

moors Meaning

moors

one of the Arab and Berber conquerors of Spain, a boggy area, berber, one that is peaty and dominated by grasses and sedges, an expanse of open rolling infertile land, to make fast with or as if with cables, lines, or anchors, to be made fast, to fasten in place with cables, lines, or anchors, one of a North African people that conquered Spain in the 8th century and ruled until 1492, to secure a boat by mooring

FAQs About the word moors

one of the Arab and Berber conquerors of Spain, a boggy area, berber, one that is peaty and dominated by grasses and sedges, an expanse of open rolling infertil

steppes, prairies,plains, grasslands, downs, velds, savannas, savannahs, pampas, tundras

extracts, roots (out), tears (out),looses, unfixes, prizes, loosens, unfastens, pulls, yanks

The vast, desolate moors stretched endlessly before the solitary traveler.

The wind howled across the barren moors, carrying with it the scent of peat and heather.

The sheep grazed peacefully on the rugged moors, their bleating echoing through the empty landscape.

Emily Brontë's novel "Wuthering Heights" is set on the wild and unforgiving moors of Yorkshire.