combe
English
    
    
Etymology
    
From Middle English coumbe, cumbe, from Old English cumb, from Proto-Brythonic (compare Welsh cwm), from Proto-Celtic *kumbā. Doublet of cwm.
Pronunciation
    
Noun
    
combe (plural combes)
- A valley, often wooded and often with no river
- 1914, Saki, ‘The Cobweb’, Beasts and Superbeasts:- its long, latticed window [...] looked out on a wild spreading view of hill and heather and wooded combe.
 
- 1805, Robert Southey, “(please specify the page)”, in Madoc, London: […] [F]or Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, and A[rchibald] Constable and Co, […], by James Ballantyne, […], →OCLC:- gradual rise the shelving combe displayed.
 
- 1950 April, Timothy H. Cobb, “The Kenya-Uganda Railway”, in Railway Magazine, pages 264-265:- You wake up next morning on what looks like Salisbury Plain, only here you climb up the side of every combe, round the end and out the other side.
 
 
- A cirque.
Usage notes
    
Used, especially in South West England, in many placenames, e.g. Compton, Wycombe.
Translations
    
French
    
    Etymology
    
From Transalpine Gaulish *cumba, from Proto-Celtic *kumbā. Compare Breton komm (“river-bed”), Irish com, Welsh cwm.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /kɔ̃b/
Further reading
    
- “combe”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Galician
    
    Verb
    
combe
- inflection of combar:
- first/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative
 
Italian
    
    Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˈkom.be/
- Rhymes: -ombe
- Hyphenation: cóm‧be
Middle English
    
    
Spanish
    
    Verb
    
combe
- inflection of combar:
- first/third-person singular present subjunctive
- third-person singular imperative
 
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