The coastlands north of the mouth of the Rhine were occupied by the Canninefates, beyond them by the Frisii as far as the mouth of the Ems, thence onward to the mouth of the Elbe by the Chauci.
Whether this be on the hot coastlandsof Java, in tiny sod-banked terraces far up on the slopes of Dehra Dun, or in the shadow of Fuji itself, makes no manner of difference.
On kindly but conflicting advice and suggestion, we had searched hither and thither over the coastlands of British Guiana.
For these coastlands attract rural labourers who descend from the mountains during the season of hay-making or fruit-harvest, and then return infected to their homes.
Thucydides already speaks of these coastlands as depopulated (relatively speaking, I suppose), and under the Romans they recovered but little; they have only begun to revive quite lately.
It seemed quite plain that the evacuation of Cilicia had become necessary, and that henceforth only the coastlands of Syria properly so called would be occupied.
Travels in the Coastlandsof British East Africa, London, 1898, p.
Wallace's account of the Batjan coastlands when visited by him in the late fifties.
The terrible results of the plentiful possession of this tree are seen in Ceylon, at Panama, in the coastlands of Mexico, at Auckland in New Zealand.
The coastlands of most ancient countries are exhausted, densely bushed, and uninhabited.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coastlands" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.