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Definition of Rivered
1. a. Supplied with rivers; as, a well rivered country.
Definition of Rivered
1. Verb. (poker) (past of river) ¹
2. Adjective. Supplied with rivers. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Rivered
1. watered by rivers [adj]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Rivered
Literary usage of Rivered
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings by Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), Norton Shaw, Francis Galton, William Spottiswoode, Clements Robert Markham, Henry Walter Bates, John Scott Keltie (1867)
"These two distinct river systems of the colony—the one-rivered and the
many-rivered —were necessarily caused by the zigzag direction of the great interior ..."
2. Report of the Annual Meeting (1871)
"Wood, in the account of his journey to the sources of the Oxus, had furnished us
with an explanation of the origin of the old legend of a four- rivered ..."
3. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society (1867)
"These two distinct river systems of the colony—the one-rivered and the
many-rivered —were necessarily caused by the zigzag direction of the great interior ..."
4. Proceedings of the British Meteorological Society by British Meteorological Society (1867)
"The main portion of the colony of Natal is thus naturally distributed into two
great river-systems,—the Tugela Basin, a one-rivered system with a convergent ..."
5. Report by British Association for the Advancement of Science (1871)
"Wood, in the account of his journey to the sources of the Oxus, had furnished us
with an explanation of the origin of the old legend of a four- rivered ..."
6. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"... "creeks," from their many-rivered land), a once powerful confederacy of Gulf
Indians, the strongest Indian power south of New York, except the Cherokees ..."
7. Sunset by Southern Pacific Company, Southern Pacific Company. Passenger Dept (1914)
"Listen! deep in the rabbit's chaparral, Hark! in the rivered sycamore, The live-oak
and the pine, wood-voices tell New things with those oft told before; ..."
8. The Contemporary Review (1892)
"Such a Primary Centre of Dispersion is found in that great region of many-rivered
plains north of the Caucasus, and now forming the steppes of Southern ..."