: a fertile area in the southern U.S. and especially Florida that is usually higher than its surroundings and that is characterized by hardwood vegetation and deep humus-rich soil
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Noun
On the lagoon, villas open out onto sweeping wooden decks with opalescent plunge pools, cabanas, floor hammocks that hover over the sea as well as steps that lead right into it.—Condé Nast, Condé Nast Traveler, 1 June 2026 Exempt items include ammo, firearms, bows, arrows, wrist guards, muzzles, silencers, rods and reels of $75 or less, tackle boxes of $30 or less, tents of $200 or less, sleeping bags, hammocks, camping stoves, camp chairs of $50 or less, and lanterns and flashlights $30 or less.—Jeffrey Schweers, The Orlando Sentinel, 26 May 2026 Here, guests enjoy private pools, overwater hammocks, and soaking tubs, in addition to all Diamond Club perks.—Lydia Price, Travel + Leisure, 25 May 2026 Give a small backyard patio a vacation vibe by hanging a hammock.—Jenny Hughes, The Spruce, 25 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for hammock
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Spanish hamaca, from Taino
Noun (2)
earlier hammok, hommoke, humock; akin to Middle Low German hummel small height, hump bump — more at hump