Wheatland

name, noun

name, noun ·Uncommon ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    An area where wheat is produced.
Proper Noun
  1. 1
    A number of places in the United States:; A city in Yuba County, California.
  2. 2
    A number of places in the United States:; A town in Steen Township, Knox County, Indiana; named for the wheat production in the area.
  3. 3
    A number of places in the United States:; A city in Clinton County, Iowa; named for Wheatland, President James Buchanan's home.
  4. 4
    A number of places in the United States:; An unincorporated community in Wheatland Township, Rice County, Minnesota.
  5. 5
    A number of places in the United States:; A city in Hickory County, Missouri; named for James Buchanan's home.
Show 10 more definitions
  1. 6
    A number of places in the United States:; A census-designated place in Broadwater County, Montana.
  2. 7
    A number of places in the United States:; An unincorporated community in Quay County, New Mexico.
  3. 8
    A number of places in the United States:; A town in Monroe County, New York; named for the wheat production in the area.
  4. 9
    A number of places in the United States:; A census-designated place in Cass County, North Dakota; named for a nearby wheatfield.
  5. 10
    A number of places in the United States:; A neighborhood of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
  6. 11
    A number of places in the United States:; An unincorporated community in Yamhill County, Oregon.
  7. 12
    A number of places in the United States:; A borough of Mercer County, Pennsylvania; now part of Hermitage. historical
  8. 13
    A number of places in the United States:; A town in Kenosha County, Wisconsin; named for the wheat production in the area.
  9. 14
    A number of places in the United States:; A town in Vernon County, Wisconsin.
  10. 15
    A number of places in the United States:; A town, the county seat of Platte County, Wyoming.

Etymology

Etymology 1

From wheat + land.

Etymology 2

From wheat + -land.

Related phrases

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.