Also known as neutral ground
strip of land between wartime trenches
An aerial photograph showing opposing trenches and no man's land between Loos and Hulluch in France during World War I
No man's land is wasted, unowned land, an uninhabited or desolate area that may be under dispute between parties who leave it unoccupied out of fear or uncertainty. The term was originally used to define a contested territory or a dumping ground for refuse between fiefdoms. It is commonly associated with World War I to describe the area of land between two enemy trench systems, not controlled by either side. The term is also used metaphorically, to refer to an ambiguous, anomalous, or indefinite area, regarding an application, situation, or jurisdiction. It has sometimes been used to name a specific place.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).