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veldt

 
Dictionary: veldt  veld (vĕlt, fĕlt) pronunciation
also n.
Any of the open grazing areas of southern Africa.

[Afrikaans veld, from Middle Dutch, field.]


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Wordsmith Words: veld
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(velt, felt)
noun, also veldt
Open grassland in southern Africa.

Etymology
From Afrikaans veld, from Dutch veld (field).

Usage
"From elephant turds, it (a dung beetle) molds food balls, which it rolls backward across the veld by standing on its head and kicking manically with its heels." — Rob Nixon; Around the Water Hole; The New York Times; Jul 28, 2002.

"The fiercely waged struggle which went on between humans and felines in those far-off days when sabre-toothed tiger and cave lion contended with primeval man, has long ago been decided in favour of the most fitly equipped combatant -- the Thing with a Thumb -- and the descendants of the dispossessed family are relegated to-day, for the most part, to the waste lands of jungle and veld, where an existence of self-effacement is the only alternative to extermination." — Hector Hugh Munro (Saki); The Achievement of the Cat.


The wild grassland of the interior of South Africa. The veld has been greatly modified by fire, and experiments suggest that, when protected from farming or fire, much of the veld may develop into scrub or even forest.

 
veld or veldt (both: vĕlt, Du. fĕlt) [Du.,=field], term applied to the grassy undulating plateaus of the Republic of South Africa and of Zimbabwe. The veld comprises territory of varying elevation-the high veld (4,000-6,000 ft/1,220-1,830 m), the middle veld (2,000-4,000 ft/610-1,220 m), and the lowveld (500-2,000 ft/150-610 m). The high veld, the largest of the plateaus, is in the Republic of South Africa. Abundant crops of potatoes and corn are grown, large cattle herds are grazed, and industrial and mining centers are found there.


Wikipedia: Veld
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The term Veld (sometimes Veldt) refers primarily (but not exclusively) to the wide open rural spaces of South Africa or southern Africa and in particular to certain flatter areas or districts covered in grass or low scrub. The word veld (velt in Middle High German, and feld in Old High German) is preserved also in the Afrikaans and Dutch, literally meaning 'field'. However, this simple translation does not convey the subtleties of the many idiomatic nuances of the term. Veld can be compared to the Australian terms "outback" or "bush," to "the prairie" of North America, or to the "pampas" of South America but the comparisons are not exact. A Yorkshireman might equate "wandering across the moors" to "walking through the veld."

By extension, the veld can be compared to 'the boondocks' or those places 'beyond the black stump' in Australia. There is a sense in which it refers in essence to unimproved land (and is therefore not the equivalent of the English "paddock") but in other senses the veld can include areas used both for pastoral activities and the planting of crops. The word is less appropriate for land that is heavily forested, mountainous, or urban. (On the other hand, a carefully-husbanded sports field on which the game of Rugby is played in the middle of cities such as Cape Town or Johannesburg is referred to as a "rugbyveld"). Whereas mountainous peaks and forests are not really welcome on the veld, bushes are acceptable. The area then becomes "bosveld." There are minor examples of bosveld here and there but the term is used mainly to describe Die Bosveld ("The Bushveld"), which is both a loose botanical classification and a specific geographical part of what used to be know as The Transvaal (see, for example, Jock of the Bushveld).

The word "veld" also carries military connotations. The word "field" in English has a strong association with "war," as evidenced by the expression "the first foe in the field" and the lines of the ballad 'Lord Marlborough' (see John Churchill): "You generals all and champions bold, that takes delight in field, that knocks down churches and castle walls but now to death must yield". The same relationship is paralleled in Afrikaans. Just as the English Army has its Field Marshals, the Boer armies had their Veldkornets and Veldkommandos.

Contents

Highveld and Lowveld

Much of the interior of southern Africa consists of a high plateau known as the Highveld, starting east of the Johannesburg centre. These higher, cooler areas (generally more than 5000 ft [1524m] above sea level) are characterised by flat or gently undulating terrain, grasslands and a modified tropical or subtropical climate. In some areas there is a distinct escarpment bordering the plateau, while in others the boundary is not obvious.

Some surrounding, lower areas are known as Lowveld and are generally hotter and less intensely cultivated. Before the middle of the 20th century, much of the Lowveld was home to the tsetse fly, which transmits sleeping sickness. These areas used to be known as "fever country" and were avoided by mounted travellers, owing to the susceptibility of horses to a form of the disease. Malaria was in the past also a major problem in the hotter parts of the Lowveld.This disease is caused by mosqitoes.

Quote

How well I remember the years I spent tending the cattle on the large farm, roaming over all its far expanse of veld, in which every kloof, every valley, every koppie was endeared to me by the most familiar associations. Month after month I had spent there in lonely occupation—alone with the cattle, myself and God. The veld had grown part of me, not only in the sense that my bones were a part of it, but in that more vital sense which identifies nature with man ... Having no human companion, I felt a spirit of comradeship for the objects around me. In my childish way I communed with these as with my own soul; they became the sharers of my confidence.

Jan Smuts. See the articles in Wikipedia that deal with his early years.

Alternative meanings

  • The Veldt is a short story by Ray Bradbury.
  • "The Veldt" was the name of a North Carolina alternative rock/ shoegaze band active during the 1990s[1].
  • "Veldt" is the name of a band from England[2].
  • "Veldt" is the name of a song from Simple Minds' 1979 Album Real to Real Cacophony.
  • In the video game Final Fantasy VI, the Veldt is a large flatland in which the characters can fight most previously encountered enemies, including several bosses.
  • "Veldt" is a Dutch surname

See also


Translations: Veld
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - veldt, sydafrikansk græsslette

Nederlands (Dutch)
grasvlakte (m.n. in Zuid-Afrika)

Français (French)
n. - veld

Deutsch (German)
n. - Steppe

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - λιβάδι σε οροπέδιο

Italiano (Italian)
veldt

Português (Portuguese)
n. - savana (f)

Русский (Russian)
степь, плато

Español (Spanish)
n. - estepa (en el Africa meridional)

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - grässlätt (S.Afr.)

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
草原

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 草原

한국어 (Korean)
n. - (남아프리카의) 초원

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 草原

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) جزء من هضبه الترنسفال‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮ערבת-דשא‬


 
 

 

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