bir defada doğan yavrular

listen to the pronunciation of bir defada doğan yavrular
Turkish - English
{i} litter
Collectively, items discarded on the ground
Layer of fallen leaves and similar organic matter in a forest floor
The top layer of forest floor, composed of loose debris of dead sticks, branches, twigs and recently fallen leaves or needles
If a number of things litter a place, they are scattered untidily around it or over it. Glass from broken bottles litters the pavement. + littered lit·tered The entrance hall is littered with toys and wellington boots Concrete purpose-built resorts are littered across the mountainsides
give birth to a litter of animals
{i} refuse, trash; disorder; number of young born to an animal at one time; curtained couch suspended between poles and carried by men or animals; stretcher; bedding for humans or animals (made of straw, rushes, etc.)
1 The accumulation of dead leaves, branches and other plant and animal remains that form the top layer of the forest floor 2 Trash, waste paper, or garbage lying scattered about
Litter is a dry substance that you put in the container where you want your cat to go to the toilet
A group of young produced at one birth Hog litters vary in size from 11-12 piglets, with an average of 8-9 being weaned from the sow (see piglet, wean, sow )
Material used as bedding for animals
Leaf litter, or forest litter, is the detritus of fallen leaves and bark which accumulate in forests
waste material which is discarded on the ground or otherwise disposed of improperly or thoughtlessly
the top layer of forest floor, typically composed of loose debris such as branches, twigs, and recently fallen leaves or needles; little altered in structure by decomposition The L layer of the forest floor (Deeming et al 1977) Also loose accumulations of debris fallen from shrubs, or dead parts of grass plants laying on the surface of the ground
To be supplied with litter as bedding; to sleep or make one's bed in litter
rubbish carelessly dropped or left about (especially in public places)
material used to provide a bed for animals
Straw, hay, etc
The highly visible portion of solid waste carelessly discarded outside the regular garbage and trash collection and disposal system
Uppermost layer, on the soil surface, of loose organic debris (for example, as in forests), consisting of freshly fallen or slightly decomposed organic materials