: the bed or valley of a stream in regions of southwestern Asia and northern Africa that is usually dry except during the rainy season and that often forms an oasis : gully, wash
2
: a shallow usually sharply defined depression in a desert region
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On the way to the wadi, visitors can detour to the ruins of the frankincense capital of Samharam or drive up Jebel Samhan for a view of the clouds and a Baobao forest.—Anna Zacharias, Condé Nast Traveler, 21 Jan. 2026 New geophysical surveys and coring of the wadi would shed more light on the hydrological aspects of the area, while other surveys might reveal where the eastward tunnels of the pyramid lead.—Jennifer Ouellette, Ars Technica, 5 Aug. 2024 The building was built in a wadi.—CBS News, 14 Dec. 2022 The wadi stretched outside the window.—Ruth Margalit, The New Yorker, 25 Oct. 2021 The fresh air, the space while clambering over rocks in a wadi, or valley, and the austere style of the Bear Grylls camp appears for now to offer the opposite of that.—Jon Gambrell, Star Tribune, 9 Oct. 2020 Another of Bogaczewicz’s photographs captures a Saudi family having a picnic under a highway overpass, much as their bedouin ancestors might have stopped their caravansary by a desert wadi to have a meal.—Wired, 26 Nov. 2019 Laughter of couples crossing the lawn, sinking into the darkness of the wadi.—Amos Oz, Harper's magazine, 10 Apr. 2019