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(UK) A road or track that is significantly lower than the land on either side, not formed by recent engineering but possibly of much greater age.
1982, Mark Richards, High Peak Walks, page 158:
The first pronounced rise in the ridge is succeeded by Oldgate Nick: there isn't even a footpath crossing, but it is recognisable as a holloway. Here crossed a saltway from Cheshire rising from 5altersford Hall in the upper Todd valley
2004 August 30, Catja Pafort <[email protected]>, “Re: Tight third - an invention of the 20th century?”, in rec.arts.sf.composition (Usenet), message-ID <1gjbv1i.z05lgf1e1xyjmN%[email protected]>:
Well, I see the road before me; sometimes I can see a bit further because I'm standing on a hill, sometimes I'm at the bottom of a holloway and have no idea even what lies on the other side of the hedge.
2008 December 1, <[email protected]>, “quarry cross north of Chideock, Dorset”, in uk.rec.walking (Usenet), message-ID <54237f3b-8f48-47b0-9220-9d95208686f7@k39g2000hsf.googlegroups.com>:
I enjoyed very much last week walking down that sunken track between Symondsbury and North Chideock--is that what one would call a 'holloway'?
2010, Bill Bryson, Icons of England, page 240:
In different regions they go by different names — bostels, grundles, shutes — but are all holloways. Of course, few are in use now. They are too narrow and too slow to suit modern travel. But they are also too deep to be filled in and farmed over
2014, Robert Macfarlane, Dan Richards, Holloway:
Six years later, after Roger Deakin's early death, Robert Macfarlane returned to the holloway with the artist Stanley Donwood and writer Dan Richards. The book is about those journeys and that landscape.