SKIP TO CONTENT

coulee

/ˈkuli/
IPA guide

Other forms: coulees

A coulee is a gully, stream, or ravine that's full of water. Bring your waterproof boots for the hike — the valley is full of coulees!

The meaning of coulee varies regionally. In some places, a coulee is a flowing stream of volcanic lava. In the northwestern U.S. and Canada, it's a kind of trench or trough that fills with rainwater, but in the Midwest people might call any small body of water a coulee. And in Louisiana, it's spelled coulée. The word is North American in origin, from a French root meaning "to flow," and it was first used by 17th-century French trappers and explorers.

Definitions of coulee
  1. noun
    a stream of molten lava or a sheet of solidified lava
  2. noun
    a seasonally flooded ravine (a term used mainly in Western U.S. and Canada)
Cite this entry
Style:
MLA
  • MLA
  • APA
  • Chicago

Copy citation
DISCLAIMER: These example sentences appear in various news sources and books to reflect the usage of the word ‘coulee'. Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Vocabulary.com or its editors. Send us feedback
Word Family