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canyon
1[kan-yuhn]
Canyon
2[kan-yuhn]
noun
a town in N Texas.
canyon
/ ˈkænjən /
noun
a gorge or ravine, esp in North America, usually formed by the down-cutting of a river in a dry area where there is insufficient rainfall to erode the sides of the valley
canyon
A long, deep, narrow valley with steep cliff walls, cut into the Earth by running water and often having a stream at the bottom.
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of canyon1
Example Sentences
Wealthy candidates face a significant “empathy canyon” with voters, who remain skeptical that individuals with hundreds of millions of dollars can genuinely understand the daily struggles of average Californians earning median household incomes.
“Not only do they volunteer their time, these are people who lug couches out of a canyon.”
Perched 8,750 feet up in a box canyon in the Colorado Rockies, it’s reachable only by twisting roads or a white-knuckle drop into one of the nation’s highest airports.
So Underwood redesigned the structure, creating a more rustic lodge out of the original stonework, perched on the very edge of the canyon.
It can’t be completed solely on foot, and hikers need rope and equipment to rappel down the canyon and to make their way back up.
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