トチ
Meanings
Noun
1. plot of land; lot; soil
2. locality; region; place
Pitch accent
Top 39200
Composed of
Turkey
earth; ground; place; territory; bottom (of a package, book, etc.); earth (one of the five elements)
Used in vocabulary (21 in total)
each locality; each place; each region
familiarity with the land; locality or terrain (usually associated with knowing or feeling the locality)
nature of the locality; character of a place; local colour; local color
Examples (45 in total)
He wants to dispose of his land.
The soil here is fertile.
The most expensive thing is land.
He has a lot of land.
Who owns this land?
Land prices are running higher every year.
This land belongs to the Royal Family.
Tom owns this land.
This land is my property.
Fertile soil is indispensable for agriculture.
Trees are cut down and land is cleared.
They sell land by the acre.
This house and this land are mine.
A part of this land is mine.
He distributed his land among his sons.
It always takes time to get used to a new place.
She claimed to be the owner of the land.
This land gives good crops.
Flat land has no mountains or hills.
The land to the northeast was low-lying.
He has no title to this land.
Mr. Ford owns this land.
The climate here is generally mild.
The natives have to defend their land against invaders.
A bulldozer was used to level the lane.
They are boring the ground for oil.
The property was purchased with laundered political money.
George was tricked into buying the land.
The climate affects people in every land.
There are no easy answers to the land problem in Japan.
Capital, land and labor are the three key factors of production.
He bought the land for the purpose of building a house on it.
A quarrel arose about what to do with the land.
He decided to rent his property to that company.
My idea of that place is not very clear.
The law forbids the building of any skyscraper on this land.
I don't know how to manage that large estate.
I gave him some good advice about buying land.
They disputed the ownership of the land for years.
In feudal Japan, the lord with the largest land holdings was called a "daimyo."
He is entitled to get the land; it was his father's.
If necessary, the government will force estate agents to reduce land prices.
The land was divided into 8 lots.
The land slopes gently toward the river.
For three hundred years they have farmed the surrounding land.