Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Midland
Mid′land
,Adj.
1.
Being in the interior country; distant from the coast or seashore;
as,
. midland
towns or inhabitantsHowell.
2.
Surrounded by the land; mediterranean.
And on the
midland
sea the French had awed. Dryden.
Mid′land
,Noun.
The interior or central region of a country; – usually in the plural.
Drayton.
Webster 1828 Edition
Midland
MID'LAND
,Adj.
1.
Surrounded by the sea; mediterranean. And on the midland sea the French had aw'd.
Definition 2024
Midland
Midland
See also: midland
English
Proper noun
Midland
- A town in Maryland
- A city in Michigan
- A town in North Carolina
- A village in Ohio
- A town in Ontario, Canada
- A borough in Pennsylvania
- A city in Texas
- A census-designated place in Virginia
- A census-designated place in Washington
Adjective
Midland (comparative more Midland, superlative most Midland)
- From or pertaining to the Midlands.
- 1854, Report from the Select Committee on Conveyance of Mails by Railways, page 153:
- The second has a branch to Birmingham from Rugby, but the main use of it is to proceed over this very Midland line ; it turns off at Rugby, and goes by way of Leicester to Derby, and so on to the North.
- 1908, “Report of the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble-Minded”, in (Please provide the title of the work), page 88:
- In the more Midland counties, there are thirteen ; in Staffordshire (Wolverhampton), one; in Warwick (Birmingham), seven; in Nottingham, three; in Leicester, one; and Northampton, one.
- 1923, “The Old Book Trade in Birmingham”, in The Publishers' Circular and Booksellers' Record, page 235:
- The obvious inference was that Midland culture found its centre in Lichfield, and that the only claim to distinction which the larger town could make was based on commercial grounds.
- 1930, Victoria Roberts, Eighteenth Century Gentlemen, ISBN 0521061008, page 73:
- His only visit to London had been that on which been touched by Queen Anne for the King's Evil and throughout his life he preserved a Midland accent in his speech.
- 2004, Kenneth Morgan, Bristol and the Atlantic Trade in the Eighteenth Century, ISBN 0521893674, page 109:
- This stimulated sales and suited the needs of small manufacturers in the Midland city, who could not afford to trade on credit.
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