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Definition of Golf course
1. Noun. Course consisting of a large landscaped area for playing golf.
Category relationships: Golf, Golf Game
Terms within: Bunker, Sand Trap, Trap, Hazard, Golf Hole, Hole, Fairway, Green, Putting Green, Putting Surface, Rough, Tee, Teeing Ground
Generic synonyms: Course
Specialized synonyms: Golf Links, Links
Definition of Golf course
1. Noun. (golf) The land where one plays golf, with a green and a flag ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Golf Course
Literary usage of Golf course
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Virginia Handbook by Blair Howard, Mary K. Burnham, Bill Burnham (2005)
"General's Ridge golf course is a championship course surrounded by rolling ...
Lake Ridge Park golf course is a nine-hole executive course on the banks of ..."
2. Adventure Guide to Bermuda by Blair Howard (2004)
"... Castle Harbour Golf Club, Ocean View golf course, Port Royal golf course, the
Princess Golf Club (par three) and the St. George's Golf Club. ..."
3. Design in Landscape Gardening by Ralph Rodney Root, Charles Fabens Kelley (1914)
"The purpose of a golf-course is recreation, and consequently it is ... The golf-course
itself is strictly utilitarian, inasmuch as it is to be used for a ..."
4. Design in Landscape Gardening by Ralph Rodney Root, Charles Fabens Kelley (1914)
"The purpose of a golf-course is recreation, and consequently it is ... The golf-course
itself is strictly utilitarian, inasmuch as it is to be used for a ..."
5. Vancouver and Victoria by Ulysses Travel Edito Staff (2003)
"Furry Creek Britannia Beach •0922-9576 or 922-9461 No golf course boasts a more
... Fraserview golf course 7800 Vivian Dr. •0280-1616 The Fraserview Golf ..."
6. Memoirs of the Miami Valley by John Calvin Hover (1919)
"... twenty-five acres of farm and woodland and lay it out as a golf course, build
a clubhouse and make it available at a low figure to a large membership. ..."
7. The Entomologist's Monthly Magazine by Nathaniel Lloyd and Company (1906)
"... F., was fairly common at one spot on the seaward side of le golf course, while
on the landward side amongst some dwarf plants of Tri folium ..."