Definitions
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun Low, wooded grounds or swamps in Eastern Maryland and Virginia.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Alternative form of
pocosin .
Etymologies
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Examples
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The region inhabited by the Croatans is a low woodland, swampy region, locally known as pocoson land, abounding in whortleberries and blackberries, which bring some revenue to the people.
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At the meeting of the United States Agricultural Society, at Washington, in January, 1857, Mr.G. W.P. Custis spoke in connection with the great importance of this subject, of the vast quantity of soil -- the richest conceivable -- now lying waste, to the extent of 100,000 acres, along the banks of the Lower P.tomac, and which he denominates by the old Virginia title of _pocoson_.
Farm drainage The Principles, Processes, and Effects of Draining Land with Stones, Wood, Plows, and Open Ditches, and Especially with Tiles Henry Flagg French
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After about a quarter of an hour's pursuit, when the depths of this pocoson had been reached, Old
The old plantation : how we lived in great house and cabin before the war, 1901
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After a time the party returned with the mule and soon the hind legs of the bear were closely tied together and slowly, yet successfully, the mule dragged the bear out of the pocoson.
The old plantation : how we lived in great house and cabin before the war, 1901
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Holly Shelter pocoson occupies a large part of the southeastern section, and
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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In the northeastern section lies the half of another similar pocoson nearly as large, called Angola Bay, and in the centre of the western half of the county is a third but much smaller swamp of the same general character.
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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On the north side of the Neuse there is a section of country extending from Wayne on the west to Falling Creek on the east, a distance of about ten miles, and known as Buckleberry pocoson.
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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It consists largely of swamps, pocoson and oak flats.
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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This pocoson is flanked on the westward toward the North-east Cape Fear river by a fringe of fertile white-oak flats and semi-swamp lands, and on the north by a strip of sandy pine flats, dotted here and there with fertile spots.
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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The central portion and larger part of this great pocoson, which contains about one hundred square miles, is very nearly barren, but around its margin, especially toward the river, are considerable tracts of white-oak flats, canebrake, and swamp lands, with their characteristic growths and soils.
North Carolina and its Resources. North Carolina. Board of Agriculture. 1896
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