d
da
db
dc
dd
de
df
dg
dh
di
dj
dk
dl
dm
dn
do
dp
dr
ds
dt
du
dw
dx
dy
dz
Перевод: dike
[существительное] сточная канава; канава ; ров ; уборная ; гать ; дамба ; защитная дамба; плотина ; запруда ; преграда ; препятствие; каменная ограда; дерновая ограда; дейк [геол.] ; дайка ; [глагол] защищать дамбой; окапывать рвом; осушать канавами; мочить в канавах
Тезаурус:
- There is a problem on the, on that, that bridge repair, which is the, which is the wooden plank er which a prevents access to the side of the, of the dike.
- Between the admirable houses in the so-called Quartier de la Barre, which goes down to the harbour mouth, and the sandy beach, a dike has been built up, twelve or fifteen feet high, to protect the town from the waves.
- K. O. Dike, "John Beecroft", Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria , vol. i, part 1, 1956, pp. 5-;14, and Trade and Politics in the Niger Delta, 1830-;1865 , 1956; J. F. Ade Ajayi, Christian Missions in Nigeria, 1841-;1891 , 1965.
- I'd been banging up dikes for a couple of years when smack came on the scene and I just sort of carried on as I had been doing, y'know, with the smack instead of the dike.
- There's a theory being nurtured in certain quarters that Microsoft Corp Windows NT is less a strategic product than it is a dike against Unix and that Microsoft is trying to freeze the marketplace long enough to bring on Cairo, the Taligent Inc/Sun Microsystems Inc Project Distributed Objects Everywhere-like object-oriented environment it's working on.
- I skirted the dike district too - or at any rate two big chicks denied me entry to their purple sanctum.
- And the bills will come anyway in the normal way to, to, to the , it's got pushed into the dike, and it's gone down afew , it's got pushed into the dike, and it's gone down afew y thirty pounds maximum are we agreed?
- It is true that the Romans had constructed two or three artificial waterways in this country large enough to be regarded as canals: Car Dike that winds from Peterborough up to Lincoln, the Foss Dike joining the Witham and the Trent, and perhaps the Itchen Dike from Winchester to the Itchen.
- As already noted the Car Dike, north of Peterborough is now known not to have been a canal but a Roman catch-water drain.
- The dike is there because in 1749 a particularly intrusive tidal wave swamped and destroyed some 200 houses in this otherwise favoured quarter of the town.
|
|
LMBomber - программа для запоминания иностранных слов
|
|