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  1. No man's land is waste or unowned land or an uninhabited or desolate area that may be under dispute between parties who leave it unoccupied out of fear or uncertainty. The term was originally used to define a contested territory or a dumping ground for refuse between fiefdoms . [ 1 ]

  2. No Man’s Land, said poet Wilfred Owen, was “like the face of the moon, chaotic, crater-ridden, uninhabitable, awful, the abode of madness.” In the Oxford English Dictionary, Nomanneslond,...

  3. No Man’s Land is the empty strip of territory that divides two opposing forces. The enemies were divided by barbed wires and various miles of empty land. No Man’s Land was the places where cruel and deadly battles took place during the First World War. Such lands witnessed ‘blood, explosions, death, and the anguished cries of the dying ...

  4. May 20, 2021 · ‘No Man’s Land’ in World War I was the stretch of land between the two opposing frontline trenches. ‘No Man’s Land’ was named because it symbolized the likelihood of advancing soldiers dying in this region. This is because it was likely the most dangerous place for the soldiers of World War I.

  5. No Man's Land, Illinois, 20km north of Chicago, became especially notorious. Largely lawless, the area was renowned as “a slot machine and keno sin center where college students were being...

  6. Sep 13, 2018 · No-man’s-land might be defined as the disputed space between Allied and German trenches–from the coast at one end to Switzerland 470 miles away at the other–which became the princi­pal killing field of a notoriously cruel and inhuman war. Inevitably it drew sharp comment from those who con­ templated it , or faced the prospect of going out into it.

  7. "No Man's Land" was a popular term during the First World War to describe the area between opposing armies and trench lines. How it came to exist and how far it might extend was influenced by a variety of military and topographic factors.