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RISE |
Hillock |
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TUFFET |
Hillock |
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KNOLL |
Hillock |
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BERRY |
A mound; a hillock. |
|
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TUMP |
A little hillock; a knoll. |
|
MAMELON |
A rounded hillock; a rounded elevation or protuberance. |
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-OCK |
A suffix used to form diminutives; as, bullock, hillock. |
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MONTICLE |
A little mount; a hillock; a small elevation or
prominence. |
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TUMULAR |
Consisting in a heap; formed or being in a heap or
hillock. |
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HUMMOCK |
A rounded knoll or hillock; a rise of ground of no great
extent, above a level surface. |
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HOMMOCK |
A small eminence of a conical form, of land or of ice; a
knoll; a hillock. See Hummock. |
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TUMULUS |
An artificial hillock, especially one raised over a grave,
particularly over the graves of persons buried in ancient times; a
barrow. |
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MOLEHILL |
A little hillock of earth thrown up by moles working
under ground; hence, a very small hill, or an insignificant obstacle or
difficulty. |
|
DOWN |
A bank or rounded hillock of sand thrown up by the wind
along or near the shore; a flattish-topped hill; -- usually in the
plural. |
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MOUND |
... up artificially; a regular and
isolated hill, hillock, or knoll. ... |
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MONTEM |
...ton
school, England, of going every third year, on Whittuesday, to a
hillock near the Bath road, and exacting money from all passers-by, to
s... |