copland

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See also: Copland

English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

Perhaps from obsolete cop (summit, hilltop) +‎ land.

Noun[edit]

copland

  1. (obsolete) A piece of ground terminating in a point or acute angle.
    • 1622, Michael Drayton, A Chorographicall Description of All the Tracts, Rivers, Mountains, Forests, and other Parts of this Renowned Isle of Great Britain, page 64:
      For th'surface of a soyle, a Copland, Copland cry , Till to your shouts the Hills with Ecchoes all reply.

Etymology 2[edit]

From cop (police officer) +‎ land.

Noun[edit]

copland (uncountable)

  1. The world of police officers and police activity.
    • 2007, Randy Jurgensen, ‎Robert Cea, Circle of Six: The True Story of New York's Most Notorious Cop Killer and the Cop who Risked Everything to Catch Him.:
      When that thirteen alarm sounded, everything in copland stopped, all focus was on the radio for the coordinates.
    • 2010, C.B. Forrest, Slow Recoil:
      Last he'd heard, Aoki was in line for a jump to Homicide, the Holy Grail in copland.
    • 2012, James Patterson, Kill Alex Cross, page 462:
      The other had a face that Rodney Glass would never forget. Not since they'd been nose to nose in that interview room in copland.