Flooding
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flooding teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı
- su basması (Coğrafya)
- feyezan (Coğrafya)
- seylap (Coğrafya)
- kabarma (Coğrafya)
- taşkınlık
- boğulma (Otomotiv)
- selbasma (Bilgisayar)
- sel basması (Coğrafya)
- su baskını
Örnek Cümle:
Geçen haftanın sağanak yağışları nedeniyle su baskınımız vardı.
-We had flooding because of last week's heavy rains.
Örnek Cümle:
Bu yolda trafik su baskınından dolayı kesintiye uğradı.
-Traffic on this road has been disrupted due to flooding.
- taş {f}
Örnek Cümle:
Nil'in periyodik taşkınları Mısır için çok önemlidir.
-The periodic flooding of the Nile is very important to Egypt.
- rahim kanaması
- taşma {i}
- taşarak
- tufan {i}
- taşmak (İnşaat)
- Rahim (uterus) kanaması, metroraji (Tıp)
- sel {i}
Örnek Cümle:
Küresel ısınma kıyı sellerine neden olacak.
-Global warming will cause coastal flooding.
Örnek Cümle:
İki haftalık şiddetli yağmur sel ile sonuçlandı.
-Two weeks of heavy rain resulted in flooding.
- paket yollama
- flood
- {f} sel basmak
- flood
- {i} tufan
Ben atalarımın kim olduğunu bilmiyorum. Bizim evraklar Nuh Tufanı sırasında kayboldu.
-I don't know who my ancestors are. Our papers got lost during the Flood.
- flood
- {i} su baskını
Su baskını mahsülleri mahvetti.
-The flood ruined the crops.
Bu yolda trafik su baskınından dolayı kesintiye uğradı.
-Traffic on this road has been disrupted due to flooding.
- flood
- sel
Sel, ekinlere büyük zarar verdi.
-The flood did great damage to the crops.
Okullar sel nedeniyle tatil edildi.
-Classes have been suspended due to floods.
- flooding method
- salma sulama
- flooding warning
- su baskını uyarısı
- flooding by tsunami
- (Çevre) tsunami seli
- flooding of debris
- (Çevre) moloz seli
- flooding of storm surge
- (Çevre) fırtına dalgası seli
- flash flooding
- flaş sel
- flood
- {f} su basmak
- flood
- {f} istila etmek
- flood
- {i} taşkın
Daha önce, bölge için taşkınlar kaderdi.
-Previously, floods were fate for the region.
Nil'in periyodik taşkınları Mısır için çok önemlidir.
-The periodic flooding of the Nile is very important to Egypt.
- flood
- nehir
Nehir geniş bir alanı su altında bıraktı.
-The river flooded a large area.
Nehir tüm bölgeyi sular altında bıraktı.
-The river flooded the entire region.
- flood
- {f} yağdırmak
- flood
- fazla kanamak
- flood
- {f} oto. (motoru) ambale etmek
- flood
- {i} sel gibi şey
- flood
- {f} akın etmek
- flood
- çok sayıda olmak
- flood
- (Tıp) flod
- flood
- sel baskını
Şiddetli yağmurun ardından büyük bir sel baskını oldu.
-In the wake of the heavy rain, there was a major flood.
Bir Florida şehri sokaklardaki tuzlu suyu emmek için vakum hortumları ile donatılmış tanker kamyonları göndererek düzenli gelgit sel baskınına karşılık veriyor.
-A Florida city is responding to regular tidal flooding by sending out tanker trucks equipped with vacuum hoses to suck saltwater off the streets.
- flood
- sel gibi
Eski güzel günlerin hatıraları sel gibi peş peşe geldi.
-Memories of the good old days came flooding back one after another.
- flood
- sel basması
- flood
- ırmak
Irmaklar yoğun yağış yüzünden taştı.
-The rivers were flooded by the heavy rain.
- carburettor flooding
- karbüratör bozulması
- flood
- taşmak
- flood
- {f} taş
Pazar yabancı mallarla dolup taşıyordu.
-The market was flooded with foreign goods.
Tayfun nehrin taşmasına neden oldu.
-The typhoon caused the river to flood.
- flood
- feyezan
- flood
- su basması
- flood
- sel gibi taşmak
- coastal flooding
- kıyı taşkınları
- flood
- seylap
- flood
- {i} bolluk
- flood
- deniz
Deniz seviyesinin altında olan toprakları su basacak. Bu, insanların evsiz kalması ve ürünlerinin tuzlu su tarafından tahrip edileceği anlamına gelir.
-Low-lying lands will flood. This means that people will be left homeless and their crops will be destroyed by the salt water.
- flood
- su
- flood
- taşmak coşmak
- flood
- {f} sel gibi akmak
- flood
- {f} basmak
- flood
- derya
- flood
- taşkın tufan
- flood
- flood control su baskınını önleme
- flood
- üstüne sel gibi su salıvermek
- irrigation by surface flooding
- yüzeysel taşırma
İlgili Terimler
flooding teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Present participle of flood
- An act of flooding; a flood or gush
- A tide rising or moving from low to high water
- a technique used in behavior therapy; client is flooded with experiences of a particular kind until becoming either averse to them or numbed to them
- overfull with water; "swollen rivers and creeks
- If flooding occurs, an area of land that is usually dry is covered with water after heavy rain or after a river or lake flows over its banks. The flooding, caused by three days of torrential rain, is the worst in sixty-five years. a situation in which an area of land becomes covered with water, for example because of heavy rain
- A method of behavior therapy in which the client is confronted with high levels of the phobic stimulus until the fear response is extinguished (p 582)
- Leak Detection: A system which while being leak tested becomes so filled with a tracer gas as to make impracticable further leak testing Gas Detection: Sensor flooding occurs when a gas concentration at the sensor exceeds its stoichiometric mixture The signal from the sensor reverts to zero because the mixture in the air is too gas-rich to burn
- An abnormal or excessive discharge of blood from the uterus
- Filling a tank through flood ports, open flood valves, or other sea connections, is known as flooding
- Action by a switch that does not know the ports destination MAC address found in the The switch transmits the broadcast packet through all ports except for the one on which it arrived
- Surface inundation by moderate to fast moving water Usually associated with sedimentation and erosion
- A behavior therapy in which a phobia is eliminated by forced exposure to the feared stimulus without an aversive consequence
- Act of filling a space with a liquid
- Water near or on the highway surface
- inundation, deluge, overflow of water {i}
- When discharge exceeds the capacity of an active channel to contain the flow
- The temporary covering of the soil surface by water from any source Shallow water standing during or shortly following rain is excluded from the definition of flooding Marshes and swamps are excluded from the definition of flooding because water is more than a temporary covering
- The temporary covering of soil with water from overflowing streams, runoff from adjacent slopes, and tides Frequency, duration, and probable dates of occurrence are estimated Frequency is expressed as none, rare, occasional, and frequent None means that flooding is not probable; rare that it is unlikely but possible under unusual weather conditions; occasional that it occurs on an average of once or less in 2 years; and frequent that it occurs on an average of more than once in 2 years Duration is expressed as very brief if less than 2 days, brief if 2 to 7 days, and long if more than 7 days Probable dates are expressed in months; November-May, for example, means that flooding can occur during the period November through May Water standing for short periods after rainfall or commonly covering swamps and marshes is not considered flooding
- To become inundated or submerged
- overfull with water; "swollen rivers and creeks"
- A technique used by a bridge to locate a destination address not present in the bridge's routing table by sending a packet out on all possible paths An acknowledgment from the receiving station contains the destination address of the packet, which can then be added to the bridge's routing table
- The term applied to a refrigeration system when the liquid refrigerant reaches the compressor
- A behavior therapy procedure in which a fearful person exposes himself or herself to what is frightening, in reality or in imagination, for extended periods of time without opportunity to escape See also behavior therapy
- Accumulation of large amounts of runoff on the landscape as a result of rainfall in excess of the soil's ability to drain water from the landscape before extensive inundation and ponding occurs See also irrigation
- One of the methods of enhanced oil recovery Water flooding or gas flooding might be considered secondary recovery methods
- The filling or covering with water or other fluid; overflow; inundation; the filling anything to excess
- inundation
- Flood
- The flood referred to in the Book of Genesis in the Old Testament
- flood
- To paste numerous lines of text to a chat system in order to disrupt the conversation
- flood
- A large number or quantity of anything appearing more rapidly than can easily be dealt with
- flood
- A floodlight
- flood
- inundation
- flood
- alluvion
- flood
- become filled to overflowing; "Our basement flooded during the heavy rains"
- flood
- {n} flow of tide, inundation
- flood
- {v} to overflow, deluge, cover with water
- flood
- If there is a flood, a large amount of water covers an area which is usually dry, for example when a river flows over its banks or a pipe bursts. More than 70 people were killed in the floods, caused when a dam burst This is the type of flood dreaded by cavers Over 25 people drowned when a schoolbus tried to cross a river and flood waters swept through
- flood
- supply with an excess of; "flood the market with tennis shoes"; "Glut the country with cheap imports from the Orient"
- flood
- A (usually disastrous) overflow of water from a lake or other body of water due to excessive rainfall or other input of water
- flood
- A flood is an overflow or inundation that comes from a river or other body of water and causes or threatens damage It can be any relatively high stream flow overtopping the natural or artificial banks in any reach of a stream It is also a relatively high flow as measured by either gage height or discharge quantity
- flood
- An overflow or inundation that comes from a river or other body of water (Barrows, 1948, p 4), and causes or threatens damage
- flood
- {f} inundate; brim over, overflow; submerge, engulf; gush, surge; overwhelm
- flood
- fill quickly beyond capacity; as with a liquid; "the basement was inundated after the storm"; "The images flooded his mind"
- flood
- High water flow or an overflow of rivers or streams from their natural or artificial banks, inundating adjacent low lying areas
- flood
- To overflow
- flood
- the inward flow of the tide; "a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune" -Shakespeare
- flood
- To overflow; to inundate; to deluge; as, the swollen river flooded the valley
- flood
- Inundation of a land surface that is not normally submerged by water from quick change in the level of a water body like a lake, stream or ocean
- flood
- the rising of a body of water and its overflowing onto normally dry land; "plains fertilized by annual inundations"
- flood
- emphasis If you say that people or things flood into a place, you are emphasizing that they arrive there in large numbers. Enquiries flooded in from all over the world. the refugees flooding out of Kosovo. = pour
- flood
- Overflowing by water of the normal confines of a stream or other body of water, or accumulation of water by drainage over areas which are not normally submerged
- flood
- -Shakespeare the rising of a body of water and its overflowing onto normally dry land; "plains fertilized by annual inundations"
- flood
- {i} inundation, deluge; torrent; great stream of water; overflow
- flood
- To cover or partly fill as if by a flood
- flood
- Any relatively high streamflow event that overflows the natural or artificial banks of a river or stream
- flood
- Menstrual disharge; menses
- flood
- The temporary inundation of normally dry land areas resulting from the overflowing of the natural or artificial confines of a river or other body of water
- flood
- light that is a source of artificial illumination having a broad beam; used in photography
- flood
- A great flow of water; a body of moving water; the flowing stream, as of a river; especially, a body of water, rising, swelling, and overflowing land not usually thus covered; a deluge; a freshet; an inundation
- flood
- High flow, overflow or inundation of a normally dry area which causes or threatens damage
- flood
- The flowing in of the tide; the semidiurnal swell or rise of water in the ocean; opposed to ebb; as, young flood; high flood
- flood
- emphasis If you say that someone was in floods of tears or in a flood of tears, you are emphasizing that they were crying with great intensity because they were very upset. They said goodbye in a flood of tears. High-water stage in which water overflows its natural or artificial banks onto normally dry land, such as a river inundating its floodplain. Uncontrollable floods likely to cause considerable damage commonly result from excessive rainfall in a brief period, but they may also result from ice jams during the spring rise in rivers, and from tsunamis. Common measures of flood control include improving channels, constructing protective levees and storage reservoirs, and implementing programs of soil and forest conservation to retard and absorb runoff from storms
- flood
- If you flood a place with a particular type of thing, or if a particular type of thing floods a place, the place becomes full of so many of them that it cannot hold or deal with any more. a policy aimed at flooding Europe with exports German cameras at knock-down prices flooded the British market. = saturate + flooded flood·ed the danger of Europe becoming flooded with low-cost agricultural imports
- flood
- A general and temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of dry land caused by the overflow of the natural boundaries of a body of water or the unusual and rapid accumulation of surface water runoff Some insurance policies that include flood as a covered peril only insure against damage caused by overflow of the natural boundaries of a body of water, but other policies also may insure against surface water losses
- flood
- emphasis If you say that a flood of people or things arrive somewhere, you are emphasizing that a very large number of them arrive there. The administration is trying to stem the flood of refugees out of Haiti and into Florida He received a flood of letters from irate constituents. = tide, torrent
- flood
- a large flow the act of flooding; filling to overflowing light that is a source of artificial illumination having a broad beam; used in photography the inward flow of the tide; "a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune"
- flood
- Any relatively high streamflow that overtops the natural or artificial banks of a stream
- flood
- If a river floods, it overflows, especially after very heavy rain. the relentless rain that caused twenty rivers to flood Many streams have flooded their banks, making some roads impassable. = overflow
- flood
- (1) Period when tide level is rising; often taken to mean the flood current which occurs during this period (2) A flow above the carrying capacity of a channel
- flood
- An overflow or inundation that comes from a river or other body of water and causes or threatens damage
- flood
- If something such as a river or a burst pipe floods an area that is usually dry or if the area floods, it becomes covered with water. The Chicago River flooded the city's underground tunnel system The kitchen flooded. + flooded flood·ed People have been mobilised to build defences and drain flooded land as heavy rains continue to fall
- flood
- To print a sheet completely with an ink or varnish flooding with ink is also called painting the sheet
- flood
- If an emotion, feeling, or thought floods you, you suddenly feel it very intensely. If feelings or memories flood back, you suddenly remember them very clearly. A wave of happiness flooded me Mary Ann was flooded with relief It was probably the shock which had brought all the memories flooding back
- flood
- Floods, especially flash floods, kill more people each year than hurricanes, tornadoes wind storms or lightning Flood water can be deceptively strong Fresh water moving at 4 mph (a brisk walking pace) exerts a force of about 66 pounds on each square foot of anything it encounters Double the water speed to 8 mph and the force suddenly rises to about 264 pounds per square foot That's enough force to punch a car or light truck off a flooded road if water reaches up to door level
- flood
- supply with an excess of; "flood the market with tennis shoes"; "Glut the country with cheap imports from the Orient
- flood
- The condition that occurs when water overflows the artificial or natural boundaries of a stream, river, or other body of water Also issued for the ponding of water at or near where the rain is falling or has fallen The term may also be used to alert the public of non life threatening flooding of small streams, streets, storm drains and low lying urban areas It may also be used if small streams in rural areas reach or exceed bankfull
- flood
- Property A general and temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of normally dry land areas from (1) overflow of inland or tidal waters, (2) the unusual accumulation and runoff of surface waters from any source, or (3) abnormal, flood-related erosion and undermining of shorelines Flood also means inundation from mud flows caused by accumulations of water on or under the ground, as long as the mud flow and not a landslide is the proximate cause of loss
- flood
- A great flow or stream of any fluid substance; as, a flood of light; a flood of lava; hence, a great quantity widely diffused; an overflowing; a superabundance; as, a flood of bank notes; a flood of paper currency
- flood
- If light floods a place or floods into it, it suddenly fills it. The afternoon light flooded the little rooms Morning sunshine flooded in through the open curtains. see also flash flood
- flood
- To cause or permit to be inundated; to fill or cover with water or other fluid; as, to flood arable land for irrigation; to fill to excess or to its full capacity; as, to flood a country with a depreciated currency
- flood
- To send more than one player into the same area of the field or court with the idea of overwhelming the defensive coverage in that area
- flood
- Any relatively high streamflow that overflows the natural or artificial banks of a stream
- flood
- cover with liquid, usually water; "The swollen river flooded the village"; "The broken vein had flooded blood in her eyes"
- flood
- A general and temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of normally dry land areas from (1) overflow of inland or tidal waters, (2) the unusual accumulation and runoff of surface waters from any source, or (3) abnormal, flood-related erosion and undermining of shorelines Flood also means inundation from mud flows caused by accumulations of water on or under the ground, as long as the mud flow and not a landslide is the proximate cause of loss
- flood
- To paste numerous lines of text in IRC, usually resulting in an automated kick or ban
- flood
- An overflow, high stream flow, or inundation that comes from a river or other body of water and causes or threatens to cause property damage
- flood
- a large flow
- flood
- the act of flooding; filling to overflowing
- flood
- an overflow or inundation that comes from a river or other body of water and causes or threatens damage It can be any relatively high streamflow overtopping the natural or artificial banks in any reach of a stream It is also a relatively high flow as measured by either gage height or discharge quantity
- flood
- The inundation of a normally dry area caused by high flow, or overflow of water in an established watercourse, such as a river, stream, or drainage ditch ; or ponding of water at or near the point where the rain fell This is a duration type event with a slower onset than flash flooding, normally greater than 6 hours
- flood
- A general and temporary condition of partial or complete inundation of normally dry land areas from overflow of inland or tidal waters, unusual or rapid accumulation or runoff of surface waters, or mudslides/mudflows caused by accumulation of water (FEMA definition) See also flash flood
- flood
- an overwhelming number or amount; "a flood of requests"; "a torrent of abuse"
- flood
- To provide (someone or something) with a larger number or quantity of something than can easily be dealt with
- flood
- A temporary submersion, partial or complete, of ordinarily dry land by water or mud Floods are typically caused by an overflow of waters, whether inland, tidal or from any accumulated runoff from any source Flood is excluded under a typical homeowner insurance policy
İlgili Terimler
flooding teriminin Türkçe İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Flood
- sel baskını
İlgili Terimler
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