Terminology: "Lands"?

Art Eatman

Staff in Memoriam
We all know what are "lands" and "grooves" in a barrel's rifling.

"Grooves" seems obvious, but where did the term "Lands" come from?

:confused:, Art
 

Steven Mace

New member
Art, the word 'land' from Webster's 1828 Dictionary:

7. The ground left unplowed between furrows, is by some of our farmers called a land.

The word 'groove' is listed in the same dictionary:

1. A furrow, channel, or long hollow cut by a tool. Among joiners, a channel in the edge of a molding, style or rail.

Just my guess.

Steve Mace
 

C.R.Sam

New member
Johnwill beat me to it.

A canal, as opposed to an aqueduct, is a groove in the land to carry water.

Hence, the land is higher than the water.

Sam, no flooding allowed.
 

C.R.Sam

New member
There is also the suidae factor.

In Victorian times, the landed gentry lived higher off the hog than the groovy commoners.

Sam....:rolleyes:
 
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