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cutbank†
DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
Entry from the DCHP-1 (pre-1967)
This entry may contain outdated or offensive information, terms, and examples.
1n.
a precipitous river bank, eroded by the current.
Quotations
1897
While on his way home from the Rosebud in the frost and storm the horse on which he was riding went over the cut bank near the iron bridge on the Bow.
1954
The cabin stood on a high cutbank looking straight north across the Liard.
1962
. . . I couldn't remember just which of the cut banks along the lake was the one where I had seen the nodules in place.
2n.
either one of the two banks of a river that has eroded a course deep into its bed.
See: cut-rock
Quotations
1897
The banks were high, towering in some places three, four or five hundred feet above the river; here abrupt and precipitous, consisting of cut banks of stratified clay; in other places more receding, but by a gradual slope rising, beneath dense foliage, to an equal elevation.
1962
. . . a narrow bridge of land is known as a "hog's back" and the precipitous escarpments of clay bordering on a river are "cut-banks."
3n.
a hill having a steep front resulting from erosion.
See: cuthill
Quotations
1889
Our delight was to make corrals for the buffaloes, and to drive them over the cut bank and let them fall.
1934
Along lovely jackpine ridges, down one cutbank and up another . . . our cayuses followed the guide with tireless gait.
1955
We turned south into a long stretch of shale cutbanks.