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landslide
[land-slahyd]
noun
the downward falling or sliding of a mass of soil, detritus, or rock on or from a steep slope.
the mass itself.
an election in which a particular victorious candidate or party receives an overwhelming mass or majority of votes.
the 1936 landslide for Roosevelt.
any overwhelming victory.
She won the contest by a landslide.
verb (used without object)
to come down in or as in a landslide.
to win an election by an overwhelming majority.
landslide
/ ˈlændˌslaɪd /
noun
Also called: landslip.
the sliding of a large mass of rock material, soil, etc, down the side of a mountain or cliff
the material dislodged in this way
an overwhelming electoral victory
( as modifier )
a landslide win
landslide
The rapid downward sliding of a mass of earth and rock. Landslides usually move over a confined area. Many kinds of events can trigger a landslide, such as the oversteepening of slopes by erosion associated with rivers, glaciers, or ocean waves; heavy snowmelt which saturates soil and rock; or earthquakes that lead to the failure of weak slopes.
The mass of soil and rock that moves in this way.
Word History and Origins
Origin of landslide1
Example Sentences
He won that election in a landslide, with at least 85 people killed in ensuing unrest.
The rains have caused landslides and floods in several parts of the country, inundating villages and towns and killing hundreds.
First and most important, the so-called Labour landslide of the July 2024 general election was an illusion, or at best an artifact of the U.K.’s increasingly dysfunctional electoral system.
Save the Children staff described scenes of "destruction and devastation" after the landslide caused by heavy rainfall.
He was Scotland's only remaining Labour MP in 2015 after Labour lost 40 of its 41 seats in an SNP general election landslide.
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