marshes

listen to the pronunciation of marshes
Englisch - Türkisch

Definition von marshes im Englisch Türkisch wörterbuch

marsh
{i} bataklık

Onlar bataklıktan geçtiler. - They got through the marsh.

Bataklık diz boyudur. - The marsh is knee-deep.

marsh
marş

Bu marşmelov harikaymış. - This marshmallow is perfect.

marsh
batak

Bataklık diz boyudur. - The marsh is knee-deep.

Bataklıkta birçok balıkçıl yaşar. - Lots of herons live in the marsh.

marsh
malarya
marsh
marsh marigold
marsh
marsh gas bataklıktan çıkan metan gazı
marsh
marsh grass gö1otu
marsh
Fulica atra
marsh
Rallus aquaticus
marsh
Althaea officinalis
marsh
marsh hen su tavuğu
marsh
marsh fever sıtma
marsh
marsh mal low hatmi
marsh
su yelvesi
Englisch - Englisch
plural of
Marsh
A topographic surname for someone living by a marsh
salt marshes
plural form of salt marsh
marsh
{n} a fen, bog, swamp, watery ground
Pripet Marshes
Vast marsh region, southern Belarus and northwestern Ukraine. The largest swamp of the European continent, the marshes lie in the thickly forested basin of the Pripet River. They cover an area of about 104,000 sq mi (270,000 sq km). Densely wooded and largely uninhabited, the region has supported a diversified lumber industry. A vast amount of land reclamation took place during the 20th century, including the regulation of water drainage, permitting the development of agricultural areas
marsh
A type of wetland that does not accumulate appreciable peat deposits and is dominated by herbaceous vegetation Marshes may be either fresh or saltwater, tidal or non-tidal (See: wetlands )
marsh
A tract of soft wet land, commonly covered partially or wholly with water; a fen; a swamp; a morass
marsh
A treeless wetland characterized by certain plants that are adapted to living in wet conditions
marsh
A community of water-tolerant, soft-bodied emergent plants and associated animals usually found in a basin of shallow water or on saturated soils fed primarily by underground water sources Wetlands are characterized by frequent or continual inundation, emergent herbaceous vegetation such as cattails and rushes, and mineral soils
marsh
New Zealand writer of detective stories (1899-1982)
marsh
United States painter (1898-1954)
marsh
A wetland where plants grow with their roots in water and their tops in the air
marsh
a frequently or continually inundated wetland characterized by vegetation adapted to saturated soil conditions4
marsh
A low-lying track of soft, wet land that provides an important ecosystem for a variety of plant and animal life
marsh
A marsh is a wet, muddy area of land. = bog. New Zealand writer known for her detective novels, including A Man Lay Dead (1934) and Last Ditch (1977). American painter whose works, such as Why Not Use the 'L? and The Bowery (both 1930), depict life in New York City. An area of soft, wet, low-lying land, characterized by grassy vegetation and often forming a transition zone between water and land. an area of low flat ground that is always wet and soft bog, swamp swamp. Freshwater or marine wetland ecosystem characterized by poorly drained mineral soils and by plant life dominated by grasses. Fewer plant species grow in marshes than on well-watered but not waterlogged land; grasses, sedges, and reeds or rushes are most common. Commercially, rice is by far the most important freshwater marsh plant: it supplies a major portion of the world's grain. Salt marshes are formed on intertidal land by seawater flooding and draining, and salt-marsh grasses will not grow on permanently flooded flats. See also swamp. marsh gas marsh mallow marsh marigold Marsh Dame Edith Ngaio Marsh Othniel Charles Marsh Reginald Pripet Marshes
marsh
Periodically wet or continually flooded area with the surface not deeply submerged Covered dominantly with sedges, cattails, rushes, or other hydrophytic plants Subclasses include freshwater and saltwater marshes See swamp; miscellaneous land type
marsh
A frequently or continually inundated wetland characterized by emergent herbaceous vegetation adapted to saturated soil conditions
marsh
New Zealand writer of detective stories (1899-1982) United States painter (1898-1954)
marsh
Nonforest land that characteristically supports low, generally herbaceous or shrubby vegetation, and that is intermittently covered with water
marsh
n (ME mersh, meadowland) a tract of wet land principally inhabitated by emergent herbaceous vegetation
marsh
Wetland community dominated by grasses and sedges
marsh
An area of low, wet land, often with tall grass
marsh
A treeless wetland that is dominated by grasses
marsh
wetland, swamp, or bog
marsh
an area periodically inundated and treeless and often characterized by grasses, cattails, and other monocotyledons
marsh
A wetland where the dominant vegetation is non-woody plants, such as salt grasses and sedges, as opposed to a swamp, where the dominant vegetation consists of woody plants such as trees and shrubs
marsh
An area of low-lying wetland
marsh
An area of low, wet land, characterized by shallow, stagnant water and plant life dominated by grasses and cattails (marais)
marsh
(1) A tract of soft, wet land, usually vegetated by reeds, grasses and occasionally small shrubs (2) (SMP) Soft, wet area periodically or continuously flooded to a shallow depth, usually characterized by a particular subclass of grasses, cattails and other low plants
marsh
low-lying wetland area
marsh
A type of wetland that does not accumulate appreciable peat deposits and is dominated by herbacious vegetation Marshes may be fresh- or saltwater, tidal or nontidal (Source: Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, 1990)
marsh
{i} low lands which are usually covered partially or entirely with water; swamp; morass
marsh
A wetland that is usually submerged in shallow water and whose vegetation is dominated by herbs
marsh
Wetland without trees; in North America, this type of land is characterized by cattails and rushes
marsh
An area of shallow open water, surrounded by aquatic vegetation like cattails, bulrushes, and sedges Marshes are very rich in nutrients
marsh
low-lying wet land with grassy vegetation; usually is a transition zone between land and water; "thousands of acres of marshland"; "the fens of eastern England"
marsh
A low-lying tract of soft wetland that is usually seasonally or tidally flooded or wet and is often dominated by one or a few plant species, especially grasses
marshes

    Türkische aussprache

    märşız

    Aussprache

    /ˈmärsʜəz/ /ˈmɑːrʃəz/

    Etymologie

    [ 'märsh ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English mersh, from Old English merisc, mersc; akin to Middle Dutch mersch marsh, Old English mere sea, pool; more at MARINE.
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