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The phrase "a dark moat" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a moat that is characterized by darkness, either literally or metaphorically, often in a fantasy or historical context.
Example: "The castle stood ominously, surrounded by a dark moat that seemed to absorb the light around it."
Alternatives: "a shadowy moat" or "a murky moat".
Exact(1)
His Schloss Sommersdorf in the tiny Bavarian town of Sommersdorf is a chalky-colored limestone giant, with looming towers and a dark moat that should fulfill anyone's Dungeons & Dragons fantasy.
Similar(59)
A dark, dark winter".
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Shortly before 1PM on the 20th of February, 2012, a dark-coloured hatchback crossed the bridge that spans the moat around Norwich Castle.
Williams built Fort Jay, a five-pointed star surrounded by a dry moat, between 1806 and 1809.
It also has 35 bedrooms, a lake, a pool, and a moat, claim E!
Sometimes, the best circle around a player is a moat.
A moat of dark, bright gravy pools into an undulating bank of mashed potato, and a few token baby carrots lie about like battering rams.
"What do you mean, a moat?" "A moat.
At the casually stylish Modern Pantry in east London I'm served jumbo and rolled oats in a moat of cream with crunchy dark muscovado sugar scattered on top, the swirl of dark sugar contrasting with the off-white puddle of cream.
All it lacks is a moat and a drawbridge.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com