Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to
show current usage.Read More
Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of pasturelandWhile the disclosure calls this property pastureland, Noem has referred to it as her home.—Josh Hammer, MSNBC Newsweek, 21 Apr. 2025 The building is listed as a National Heritage, surrounded by a 75-acre garden and pastureland.—Akiko Katayama, Forbes.com, 31 Mar. 2025 Brazil has immense amounts of arable and potentially arable land, much of which, in today’s environmentally conscious world, will thankfully come from the conversion of sub-par pastureland rather than the destruction of rainforest.—Sal Gilbertie, Forbes, 18 Mar. 2025 The region’s shepherds complain that Chinese soldiers have captured multiple pasturelands and restricted them from grazing their herds.—Aijaz Hussain, San Diego Union-Tribune, 24 Mar. 2024 See All Example Sentences for pastureland
There’s more than just spectacle to this event: The park can sustain only about 1,000 of the animals without grasslands becoming dangerously depleted, so the excess population will be auctioned off in the roundup’s wake.
—
Mark Ellwood,
AFAR Media,
30 June 2025
The road passes vast farm fields, undulating grasslands dotted with towering wind turbines and sprawling cattle ranches before entering Amarillo, the Panhandle’s largest city.
Designed by the renowned Tom Doak, the course draws inspiration from the classic heathland and links courses of London and the English coast, blending golden fescues, firm turf, and low-profile shaping to deliver golf that’s understated yet deeply compelling.
—
Jeff Goudy,
Forbes.com,
10 July 2025
Near his home in Kent there were two prominent ridges, the North and South Downs; between them lay an expanse of woodlands and heathlands known as the Weald.
Biel kept the rest of her look low ley, wearing a black peacoat and trousers.
—
Catherine Santino,
Peoplemag,
10 May 2024
While Watkins thought of ley lines as prehistoric walking paths or trade routes defined by invisible roads connecting various ancient structures and landmarks, the idea has had different interpretations over the years.
Share