landfolk

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Calque of Middle English lond folk or Old English landfolc.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

landfolk (uncountable)

  1. (literary) The inhabitants of a region, especially if native.
    • 1870, William Barnes, Poems of Rural Life in the Dorset Dialect; Third Collection[1], 2nd edition, London: John Russell Smith, page iii:
      [] and I should be happy to know that my homely strains might have at all refined it among the landfolk of my own county, or any other []
    • 1944, William Bedell Stanford, “Undertone”, in Donagh MacDonagh, editor, Poems from Ireland, Dublin: Hely's Limited:
      When the landfolk of Galway converse with a stranger, / softly the men speak, more softly the women, / light words on their lips, and an accent that sings.
    • 1963, Pearl Buck, The Living Reed, New York: John Day Co., →OCLC:
      The landfolk of the region had that day brought to the revolutionary court of judgment a young man of handsome and frank countenance.

Anagrams[edit]