Top 10 similar words or synonyms for hammoon

tixover    0.837465

llandevaud    0.833878

marldon    0.831467

buckerell    0.827168

halloughton    0.825517

halstock    0.823291

farnsfield    0.820575

gosbeck    0.820259

shangton    0.819953

bossington    0.819481

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for hammoon

Article Example
Hammoon Hammoon parish covers an area of at an altitude of about . The highest land is on Kimmeridge clay in the south.
Hammoon Hammoon House was built in the 1890s for use as a hunting lodge by the 2nd Viscount Portman of nearby Bryanston. It is an early example of the use of shuttered concrete as a building material, though the exterior was finished to give an appearance of stone. It is now a private residence.
Hammoon Near St. Paul's is the thatched and mullioned manor house, which dates from the 16th century and which Sir Frederick Treves described in 1906 as "the most picturesque of its kind". It has an L-shaped plan and has had several changes since first construction, including the addition of a classical porch around 1600. According to Pevsner the building overall has "an air [...] of simple innocence under its thatched roof". It is listed by English Heritage as Grade II*.
Hammoon Beside the Stour at Hammoon Bridge is an ox-bow lake; it is upstream of the bridge, on the south side of the river. Next to the bridge there is also a gauging station that measures the river flow. It opened in 1968 and is operated by the Environment Agency. The river level typically varies between . The highest recorded level is , which occurred on 24 December 2013.
Hammoon Hammoon is a small village and civil parish in North Dorset, England, sited on a river terrace of alluvial silt by the River Stour, about east of the small town of Sturminster Newton. Its name is derived from the Old English "ham", meaning dwelling, and the surname of the Norman lord of the manor ('de Moion' or 'Mohun'). In 2001 the parish had 19 households and a population of 49. In 2013 the estimated population of the parish was 40.