half-island

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From half- +‎ island. Compare German Halbinsel (peninsula, literally half-island), Latin paeninsula (peninsula, literally almost-island).

Noun[edit]

half-island (plural half-islands)

  1. A piece of land which is "halfway" an island; a byland; peninsula.
    • 2005, Edward A. Olsen, Korea, the Divided Nation:
      Because of its half-island identity, the Korean peninsula has instilled among those who live along its coasts and on some of the over three thousand mostly small offshore islands, a long-term interest in fisheries.
    • 2010, Martin Abroquah Akanba, Revelation: The Movement of the Akan People from Kanaan to Ghana:
      For some time, the Midianites controlled part of the AraBa territories of Negeb desert and the half Island of Sinai.
    • 2011, Marita Nummikoski, Troika:
      Therefore, полуóстров is а half-island, or peninsula. Incidentally, the word peninsula is formed in the same way, from the Latin words раеnе (almost) and insula (island).
    • 2011, Robert D. Kaplan, Monsoon[1], page 284:
      Here the Chinese navy sees little but trouble and frustration in what Chinese strategists call the First Island Chain, which, going from north to south, comprises Japan and the Ryuku[sic – meaning Ryukyu] Islands, the “half-island” of the Korean Peninsula, Taiwan, [...]
  2. An area of land occupying part or half of an island.
    • 2003, Eugenio Matibag, Haitian-Dominican counterpoint:
      Yunen finds the "study of the half-island" to be no better than a "half-study," one whose artificially narrow scope blocks the understanding of shared problems and the finding of shared solutions.