plot of land• Can you double the number of homes on a plot of land without making the residents claustrophobic or the neighbors ballistic?• During the two world wars the growing of potatoes in every availableplot of land was actively encouraged.• Individual families could farmplots of landleased from the state and sell any surpluses in local markets.• Every family will be housed and have an individual plot of land.• You are buying a house precisely because it comes with a large plot of land.• Dryden spent his £13,000 redundancy money on the plot of land where he illegally built the bungalow.• Narou Chaibou, who lives near Illela, can not feed his family with the plot of land he owns.
plot to do something• They cluster around telephoneboxes and the busstation, plotting to head north.• According to others, she and some friends had plotted tokidnap her.• Another extraordinarytale says that Ra, convincedmankind was plotting tooverthrow him, sent Hathor to kill them all.• At the end of August Kerensky abruptly denounced Kornilov for plotting to overthrow the government.• Eighteen months later, Wei resurfaced when charges were brought against him for plotting to overthrow the government.• James Caan is the corruptminer who plots toseize the rights.• This is not, however the perk it seems, as clients were perpetually dreaming and plotting to stop dealing with Harvard.
plotted ... course• Ahab plotted a course which he hoped would take him to the whale.
From Longman Business Dictionary
plotplot1 /plɒtplɑːt/ noun [countableC]PROPERTY
a small piece of land for building or growing things on
a vacant plot (=empty piece of land)
a plot of land
plotplot2 verb (plotted, plotting) [transitiveT]
to draw a line or curve that shows facts or figures
We plotted a graph to show the increase in sales figures this year.