Ravine or narrow valley in the North of England and other parts of the United Kingdom.
1We can rest a bit at oad mine-house this side Bleatarn ghyll.
2The red heath on the fell-top and the beck bubbling in the ghyll.
3There was one gap in the furze at the mouth of a tributary ghyll.
4No living creature, great or small, lived in that ghyll.
5See, there they are-therebeyond the ghyll on the mere side of yon big bowder.
6Some big stanes fell on t' ram when Mayson was Bringing flock doon Barra ghyll.
7Sheep will follow a leader and the flock was straggling down the ghyll behind the lambs.
8That would take us to the big ghyll.
9He had come down the side of the ghyll, and had entered the house from behind.
10At 100 psi I stopped because I was seeing black dots shooting down into the ghyll.
11The ghyll was swollen by the thaw.
12The ghyll fell like a furled flag.
13Well, the ghyll roared louder and louder.
14Then they went up the ravine with the loud ghyll boiling into foam at one side of them.
15It fell into the beck and scrambled out on the other side, where the track led down the ghyll.
16She heard the languid splash of ripples on the stones and the murmur of a beck in a distant ghyll.