0 the land behind the coast or the banks of a river, or an area of a country that is far away from cities
1 a region in the middle part of a country, esp. a large country, that is far from cities or the coast:
The touring theater group took its production into the hinterland.
2 the area that surrounds a big city or port and on which the city or port depends for economic growth:
Inevitably, they depend heavily upon their own hinterlands, wider transport n etworks and the urban d evelopment of wider regions.
Finally, when pressed too hard by their elite masters, the cultivators simply ran away and started over in the sparsely populated hinterlands.
The hinterland's limited resources fuel a growing population's appetite for more goods.
Like other urban centres, their hinterlands were determined by cargo type, the cost and mode of transport and relative levels of demand.
Bremen, like other port-cities, had a range of overlapping hinterlands which can be defined in spatial terms or in relation to specific types of interaction.
Not only did an extensive service industry located in the capitals and other centres benefit, but also the advantages spread out into the hinterlands and rural producing areas.
The new provincial universities were the prisoners of their hinterlands and there was no reason to be confident that these hinterlands would yield large crops of students.
The extensive hinterlands and links with the surrounding countryside which these places enjoyed - precisely the qualities which made them attractive as leisure towns - served to bolster their service sectors.
中文繁体
內陸,後方地區, 偏遠地區…
More中文简体
内陆,内地, 边远地区…
MoreEspañol
región apartada, interior (de un país)…
MorePortuguês
interior…
MoreFrançais
arrière-pays…
MoreČeština
zázemí…
MoreDansk
indland…
MoreIndonesia
jauh dari pantai, daerah pedalaman…
More