English edit

Etymology edit

verdure +‎ -less

Adjective edit

verdureless (not comparable)

  1. Devoid of verdure.
    • 1857, S. H. Hammond, Wild Northern Scenes[1]:
      There were not then, as now, upon some of them, great dead trees reaching out their long bare arms in verdureless desolation above a stinted undergrowth, and piled up trunks charred and blackened by the fire that had revelled among them, but all were green, and thrifty, and glorious in their robes of beauty.
    • 1893, Jules Verne, The Adventures of a Special Correspondent[2]:
      At three o'clock in the morning we stopped forty minutes at Tchertchen, almost at the foot of the ramifications of the Kuen Lun. None of us had seen this miserable, desolate country, treeless and verdureless, which the railway was now crossing on its road to the northeast.
    • 1912, Randall Parrish, Molly McDonald[3]:
      To east and west the valley, now scarcely more green than those upper plains, bounded by its verdureless bluffs, ran crookedly, following the river course, its only sign of white dominion the rutted trail.