(Askeri) YALAYARAK GEÇMEK: Zemine yakın geçiş. Ayakta duran bir insana çarpacak kadar alçaktan geçen ve zemine hemen hemen paralel bir yol takip eden bir atım. 2. SATIHTA: Havada infilak veya sekme ateşinde paralanma noktası satıhta veya satıh altında vukua gelen infilakleri belirtmek için kullanılan kıymetlendirme veya gözetleme terimi. Ayrıca bakınız: "air", "graze burst"
A consumer which attacks large numbers of large prey during its lifetime, but removes only a part of each prey individual, so that the effect, although often harmful, is rarely lethal in the short term, and never predictably lethal
If you graze a part of your body, you injure your skin by scraping against something. I had grazed my knees a little. + grazed grazed grazed arms and legs
If something grazes another thing, it touches that thing lightly as it passes by. A bullet had grazed his arm. a wound caused by rubbing that slightly breaks the surface of your skin
When animals graze or are grazed, they eat the grass or other plants that are growing in a particular place. You can also say that a field is grazed by animals. Five cows graze serenely around a massive oak The hills have been grazed by sheep because they were too steep to be ploughed Several horses grazed the meadowland. a large herd of grazing animals
reindeer, sheep, goats and livestock: Products from these participants in the forage-livestock pathway - reindeer (meat), sheep (mutton), goats (cheese and milk), and cattle (milk and meat) - often exhibit rapid bioaccumulation of radioactive contamination
eat only parts of (many) individuals, harm varies, not always lethal (large herbivores, blood-sucking insects BHT include leeches (Hirudinae) in this category, not as parasites)
grazer
Silbentrennung
gra·zer
Türkische aussprache
greyzır
Aussprache
/ˈgrāzər/ /ˈɡreɪzɜr/
Etymologie
[ 'grAz ] (verb.) before 12th century. Middle English grasen, from Old English grasian, from græs grass.