cornpatch

English

Etymology

From corn +‎ patch.

Noun

cornpatch (plural cornpatches)

  1. A patch of corn.
    • 1966 March, Will Henry [pseudonym; Henry Wilson Allen], “The Pale Eyes”, in The Last Warpath, New York, N.Y.: Bantam Books, published May 1982, →ISBN, pages 9–10:
      She believed it was time to show the boy, to let him see with his own eyes, the difference between living free in the land of the buffalo and being trapped in the mud-log huts and cornpatches of the Mandan.
    • 1978 October, Stephen King, “The Gunslinger”, in Edward L[ewis] Ferman, editor, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, volume 55, number 4 (whole 329), Cornwall, Conn.: Mercury Press, Inc., →ISSN, section II, page 55, column 2:
      He paused by the edge of the lifeless-looking cornpatch, drew a drink from one of his skins to start the saliva, and spat into the arid soil.
    • 2003, John Kelly, Sophisticated Boom Boom, London: Vintage, published 2004, →ISBN, page 131:
      Soon the two of them had transformed the Erne into the muddy Mississippi flowing all the way to Ballyshannon through the cottonfields of Fermanagh and the fertile cornpatches of Donegal.