(Askeri) (NUCLEAR) SİLAH KALINTISI (NÜKLEER): Bir nükleer silahın patlamasından sonra geriye kalan kalıntılar. Yani muhafaza için kullanılan malzeme ve silahın diğer parçalarının yanı sıra, fizyon artıklarıyla birlikte kullanılmamış plütonyum veya uranyum
(noun) A small amount of solid material which blocks an orifice or entire channel It can be generated either externally, (paper dust) or, in rarer cases, internally from improperly cleaned units
Includes gravel, cobble, rubble, and boulder-sized sediments as well as trees and other organic detritus scattered about by either natural processes or human influences
In air drying, rubbish such as broken stickers, fragments of boards, broken-down foundations, dried weeds, etc that restricts air movement In kiln drying, broken stickers, fragments of wood, and other rubbish that interferes with air circulation and increases the fire hazard
1 A term applied to the loose material arising from the disintegration of rocks and vegetative material; transportable by streams, ice, or floods 2 Stones, scrap material; stumps, limbs, and other undesirable vegetative material; waste and trash on a site
any material including floating wood trash, suspended sediment, or bed load, moved by a flowing stream
Any solid material exceeding a 60 mm particle size that is intended for disposal and that is a manufactured object, or plant or animal matter, or natural geologic material
Any material, including floating or submerged trash, suspended sediment, or bed load, moved by a flowing stream (broken fragments of rock etc, broken by a powerful of destructive natural force such as the action of wind or a glacier) ADVANCE \x 540
Debris is pieces from something that has been destroyed or pieces of rubbish or unwanted material that are spread around. A number of people were killed by flying debris
Polite term used to describe waste, usually food left overs from customer's plates, used serviettes, etc Debris plate: A plate placed for the customer when dishes are served which have an amount of debris created; including artichokes, fresh unpeeled fruit, unfilleted fish, etc
1 : In the rainforest, dead vegetation that has fallen to the forest floor 2 : Carelessly discarded refuse or litter 3 : Rough, broken bits of stone, wood, and other materials, often found in a place of destruction
Any area, non-dependent of locale, space, or contour, that contains the debris of wreckage, impact, sinking, or other material that once constituted a complete object. Debris fields can be found at the site of air crashes, water vessel sinking, explosions of buildings, collapses, and other events that render a whole entity into components, pieces, or other non-whole items
Space debris, also known as orbital debris, space junk, and space waste, is the collection of defunct objects in orbit around Earth. This includes everything from spent rocket stages, old satellites, fragments from disintegration, erosion, and collisions
Space debris, also known as orbital debris, space junk, and space waste, is the collection of defunct objects in orbit around Earth. This includes everything from spent rocket stages, old satellites, fragments from disintegration, erosion, and collisions
() From French débris, itself from dé- (“de-”) + bris (“broken, crumbled”), or from Middle French debriser (“to break apart”), from Old French debrisier, itself from de- + brisier (“to break apart, shatter, bust”), of Germanic origin, from Frankish *brestan (“to break violently, shatter, bust”), from Proto-Germanic *brestanan (“to break, burst”), from Proto-Indo-European *bhrest- (“to separate, burst”). Cogante with Old High German bristan (“to break asunder, burst”), Old English berstan (“to break, shatter, burst”). More at burst.