Meaning of backdam | Babel Free
/ˈbækdæm/Definitions
- A dam that lies to the rear of something.
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A region of rural, undeveloped land, especially on the outskirts of a farm. Guyana
Equivalents
Español
conuco
Examples
“Two side dams are likewise thrown up, and extend as far as the cultivation, where they join a back dam; so that an estate is a complete island within itself, and dammed on all sides.”
“[...] I, by these presents, sell, alienate, and in feu-farm dispone from me, my heirs and successors, to and in favour of James Boog, [...] that small piece of ground at Canonmills, on which eight lime pits are built, lying betwixt the foredam and the backdam, on a narrow point, [...]”
“Back[-]dams had been built to allow of the utmost time being spent by the men in the foundations. When the sea receded from the dams the water was pumped out by steam power from a floating engine lying 120ft. from the rock, and the men were then able to work inside the dams until the water again overflowed.”
“During the excessively heavy rainy season of 1907 the Saramacca River rose so high that in many places it overflowed its banks and flooded the cacaofields, so that the trees were standing in water. On the estate Johanna Catharina on the right bank of the river, the backdam broke, so that bushwater came in; at „De Morgenster“ it oozed through the backdam.”
Collection of Dutch Botanical Works
“The cane-fields of the one-time Plantation Vrymen's Erven extended from the canal edge far towards the east, and Savannah Road was a mere "dam". In fact, even to-day many still refer to it as the Backdam. In my boyhood days, it was always called the Backdam.”
“‘Back-dam’ and ‘sea-dam’ are the local names given to the shorter sides of the rectangle [i.e., a field]. The ‘back-dam’ is the dam away from the sea-coast, the ‘sea-dam’ is that which is nearest to it.”
“The purpose of these conduits, [...] is to limit consumption of storage volume in the reservoir by runoff from the watershed tributary to the reservoir or to remove runoff which will collect behind backdams proposed for the Tolay reservoirs. [...] [T]hese conduits, which will range in size from 7 feet by 8 feet to 10 feet by 12 feet will carry stormwater runoff from stormwater detention basins located at the backdams around the water surface area of the reservoir, and discharge to the stream channel below the main dam.”
“The cows are kept in stables erected in small yards, and are fed with concentrates and cut grass, obtained from the back[-]dams of estates.”
“"An hour" to King George was plainly only an indeterminate period of time, for if we asked him how long it would take to walk from the river-bank to a village in the "back[-]dam", he nearly always replied, "Eh, man! 'Bout one hour!" The unit of an hour was never divided or multiplied and "one hour" turned out to be ten minutes on one occasion and two and a half hours on another.”
“The factory thrusted and pounded, puffed, and its afternoon siren screamed its deafening blast and warning, marking the hour for labourers miles away in the backdams and sugarcane fields of endeavour.”
“This section, and for the most parts its residents, were considered to be of higher status and moral character than persons from the "backdam," the section farthest from the seaside and nearest to the community's farmland. In more general terms, the backdam was also the section of plantations where the slave quarters had been located, whereas the slave owner's and overseer's residences had been located in the front seaside section.”
“A fellow named Tajoo came out of the back dam carrying a shovel on his shoulder.”
“The backdam is the region on the outskirts of plantations, which many slaves cultivated during and after slavery. The produce from backdam supplemented daily diet as well as income. Guyanese continue to actively farm backdams even today. In the Spanish Caribbean backdams are referred to as "conucos."”
“In fact, the artiste shared that at different points in his life, he counted papers for Stabroek News, was a cobbler, an office assistant, an accountant at Kuru Kuru Cooperative College and also worked in the backdams among other odd jobs.”
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.