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 speek 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:

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. I skirted the dike district too - or at any rate two big chicks denied me entry to their purple sanctum.
  7. 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?
  8. 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.
  9. As already noted the Car Dike, north of Peterborough is now known not to have been a canal but a Roman catch-water drain.
  10. 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.

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