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Etymology: [ di-'plEt ] (transitive verb.) 1807. Latin depletus, past participle of deplEre, from de- + plEre to fill; more at FULL.
Synonyms: reduction, deficiency

bitirme, yok olma, bitme, tüketme, sabit kıymetleri azaltma, boşaltma, kan alma, azaltma, bosalma, tüketim, boşalma, Boşaltmak, tüketilme, yenme, kontrol paneli, fakirleşme, Boşalmak, boşaltma/tüketme, deplesyon, tüketmek, bitirmek, kurutmak, tükenmesi, dökmek, tüketmek bitirmek, tüken, Kan almak suretiyle beden dolgunluğunu izale etmek, boşaltmak, kan almak suretiyle beden dolgunluğunu izale etmek, azaltmak, boşalt/tüket, depletion tüketme,

1 bitirme     ts
2 yok olma     ts
3 bitme  İnşaat     ts
4 tüketme     ts
5 sabit kıymetleri azaltma     ts
6 boşaltma     ts
7 kan alma     ts
8 azaltma     ts
9 bosalma     ts
10 tüketim     ts
11 boşalma     ts
12 Boşaltmak  Tıp     ts
13 tüketilme  Jeoloji     ts
14 yenme  Jeoloji     ts
15 kontrol paneli     ts
16 fakirleşme     ts
17 Boşalmak  Tıp     ts
18 boşaltma/tüketme     ts
19 deplesyon  Tıp     ts
20deplete tüketmek  fiil     ts
21deplete bitirmek  fiil     ts
22deplete kurutmak  fiil     ts
23depletion of tükenmesi     ts
24deplete dökmek     ts
25deplete tüketmek bitirmek     ts
26deplete tüken     ts
27deplete Kan almak suretiyle beden dolgunluğunu izale etmek, boşaltmak  Tıp     ts
28deplete kan almak suretiyle beden dolgunluğunu izale etmek     ts
29deplete azaltmak     ts
30deplete boşalt/tüket     ts
31deplete depletion tüketme     ts
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the act of depleting, or the state of being depleted; exhaustion, the consumption of a resource faster than it can be replenished, A system similar to depreciation that allows the owner of natural resources (for example: a coal mine or an oil well) to deduct a portion of the cost of the asset during each year of its presumed productive life, The amount of cost assigned to the extracted portion of a natural resource such as minerals You take a depreciation deduction on equipment and buildings, and you take a depletion deduction on your mining operation, A laboratory procedure for reducing the numbers of a specific cell type within bone marrow donated for transplantation One example is T lymphocyte depletion or removal It is done to minimize immune reactivity of donor cells This step may be used to decrease the likelihood or severity of graft versus host disease in circumstances in which donor-recipient matching is imperfect (particularly in relation to unrelated donor transplants), Loss of water from surface water reservoirs or groundwater aquifers at a rate greater than that of recharge, A term sometimes used to describe amortization of the cost of natural resources to expense over the useful life of the resource, The region of a semiconductor in which an electric field has swept out any free charge carriers such as electrons The field can be applied by a voltage to a metal electrode on the surface of the silicon, The consumption or exhaustion of wasting property - such as, royalties, patent rights, mines, oil and gas wells, quarries, timberlands, and other things that are consumed or worn out in the sing, The act of depleting or emptying, 1 A form of capital recovery applicable to extractive property (e g , mines) Can be on a unit-of-output basis the same as straight-line depreciation related to original or current appraisal of extent and value of deposit (known as cost depletion) Can also be a percentage of income received from extractions (known as percentage depletion) 2 A lessening of the value of an asset due to a decrease in the quantity available It is similar to depreciation except that it refers to such natural resources as coal, oil, and timber in forests, the act or process of diminishing the quantity of fluid in the vessels by bloodletting or otherwise; also excessive evacuation, as in severe diarrhea, the state of being depleted, the act of decreasing something markedly the state of being depleted, the act of decreasing something markedly, An income tax allowance reflecting the purchase price paid for merchantable timber, usually on fee simple land Also, a term used to refer to the process of harvesting your growing stock, Refers to the consumption of natural resources which are part of a company's assets Since oil, mining and gas companies deal in products that cannot be replenished, depletion reduces the company's natural assets over a specified time period The recording of depletion is a bookkeeping entry similar to depreciation and does not involve the expenditure of cash, The result of the extraction of abiotic resources (non-renewable) from the environment or the extraction of biotic resources (renewable) faster than they can be renewed, A water use term The water consumed within a service area and no longer available as a source of supply For agriculture and wetlands, it is evapotranspiration of applied water (ETAW) and evapotranspiration (ET) of flooded wetlands, plus irrecoverable losses For urban water use, it is ETAW (water applied to landscaping or home gardens), sewage effluent that flows to a salt link, and incidental ET losses For instream use, it is the amount of dedicated flow that becomes groundwater and is not available for reuse, The process by which the cost or other basis of a natural resource (for example, an oil and gas interest) is recovered upon extraction and sale of the resource The two ways to determine the depletion allowance are the cost and percentage methods, both of which are defined elsewhere in this glossary, is the result of the extraction of abiotic resources (non-renewable) from the environmentor the extraction of biotic resources (renewable) faster than they can be renewed, emptying, exhausting, using up; reduction, The process of cost allocation that assigns the original cost of a natural resource to the periods benefited, The expense resulting from the using up of a natural resource, the gradual using-up or destruction of capital assets, especially of natural resources, the process of allocating the cost of natural resources to periods when they are consumed (p 469), Method of sample preparation which removes high abundance proteins (not of interest) from the sample [CHI Proteomics report], Loss of water from surface water reservoirs or groundwater aquifers at a rate greater than that of recharge, or the amount of water that does not return to the source of supply after diversion, The loss of water from surface water reservoirs or groundwater aquifers at a rate greater than that of recharge, The progressive withdrawal of water from surface- or ground-water reservoirs at a rate greater than that of replenishment (see Recession curve and streamflow depletion ), Method of computing a deduction to ACCOUNT for a reduction in value of extractable natural resources, Removal of only the solids of the EDP (Electro-deposition process ) bath The solids are continuously deposited out while other ingredients remain and build up, To empty or unload, as the vessels of the human system, by bloodletting or by medicine, To reduce by destroying or consuming the vital powers of; to exhaust, as a country of its strength or resources, a treasury of money, etc, To deplete a stock or amount of something means to reduce it. substances that deplete the ozone layer + depleted de·plet·ed Robert E. Lee's worn and depleted army. + depletion de·ple·tion the depletion of underground water supplies. to reduce the amount of something that is present or available (depletus, past participle of deplere, from plere ), To empty or unload, as the vessels of human system, by bloodletting or by medicine, exhaust, consume, use up, empty, reduce, use up (resources or materials); "this car consumes a lot of gas"; "We exhausted our savings"; "They run through 20 bottles of wine a week",

32 the act of depleting, or the state of being depleted; exhaustion     ts
33 the consumption of a resource faster than it can be replenished     ts
34 A system similar to depreciation that allows the owner of natural resources (for example: a coal mine or an oil well) to deduct a portion of the cost of the asset during each year of its presumed productive life     ts
35 The amount of cost assigned to the extracted portion of a natural resource such as minerals You take a depreciation deduction on equipment and buildings, and you take a depletion deduction on your mining operation     ts
36 A laboratory procedure for reducing the numbers of a specific cell type within bone marrow donated for transplantation One example is T lymphocyte depletion or removal It is done to minimize immune reactivity of donor cells This step may be used to decrease the likelihood or severity of graft versus host disease in circumstances in which donor-recipient matching is imperfect (particularly in relation to unrelated donor transplants)     ts
37 Loss of water from surface water reservoirs or groundwater aquifers at a rate greater than that of recharge     ts
38 A term sometimes used to describe amortization of the cost of natural resources to expense over the useful life of the resource     ts
39 The region of a semiconductor in which an electric field has swept out any free charge carriers such as electrons The field can be applied by a voltage to a metal electrode on the surface of the silicon     ts
40 The consumption or exhaustion of wasting property - such as, royalties, patent rights, mines, oil and gas wells, quarries, timberlands, and other things that are consumed or worn out in the sing     ts
41 The act of depleting or emptying     ts
42 1 A form of capital recovery applicable to extractive property (e g , mines) Can be on a unit-of-output basis the same as straight-line depreciation related to original or current appraisal of extent and value of deposit (known as cost depletion) Can also be a percentage of income received from extractions (known as percentage depletion) 2 A lessening of the value of an asset due to a decrease in the quantity available It is similar to depreciation except that it refers to such natural resources as coal, oil, and timber in forests     ts
43 the act or process of diminishing the quantity of fluid in the vessels by bloodletting or otherwise; also excessive evacuation, as in severe diarrhea     ts
44 the state of being depleted     ts
45 the act of decreasing something markedly the state of being depleted     ts
46 the act of decreasing something markedly     ts
47 An income tax allowance reflecting the purchase price paid for merchantable timber, usually on fee simple land Also, a term used to refer to the process of harvesting your growing stock     ts
48 Refers to the consumption of natural resources which are part of a company's assets Since oil, mining and gas companies deal in products that cannot be replenished, depletion reduces the company's natural assets over a specified time period The recording of depletion is a bookkeeping entry similar to depreciation and does not involve the expenditure of cash     ts
49 The result of the extraction of abiotic resources (non-renewable) from the environment or the extraction of biotic resources (renewable) faster than they can be renewed     ts
50 A water use term The water consumed within a service area and no longer available as a source of supply For agriculture and wetlands, it is evapotranspiration of applied water (ETAW) and evapotranspiration (ET) of flooded wetlands, plus irrecoverable losses For urban water use, it is ETAW (water applied to landscaping or home gardens), sewage effluent that flows to a salt link, and incidental ET losses For instream use, it is the amount of dedicated flow that becomes groundwater and is not available for reuse     ts
51 The process by which the cost or other basis of a natural resource (for example, an oil and gas interest) is recovered upon extraction and sale of the resource The two ways to determine the depletion allowance are the cost and percentage methods, both of which are defined elsewhere in this glossary     ts
52 is the result of the extraction of abiotic resources (non-renewable) from the environmentor the extraction of biotic resources (renewable) faster than they can be renewed     ts
53 emptying, exhausting, using up; reduction  isim     ts
54 The process of cost allocation that assigns the original cost of a natural resource to the periods benefited     ts
55 The expense resulting from the using up of a natural resource     ts
56 the gradual using-up or destruction of capital assets, especially of natural resources     ts
57 the process of allocating the cost of natural resources to periods when they are consumed (p 469)     ts
58 Method of sample preparation which removes high abundance proteins (not of interest) from the sample [CHI Proteomics report]     ts
59 Loss of water from surface water reservoirs or groundwater aquifers at a rate greater than that of recharge, or the amount of water that does not return to the source of supply after diversion     ts
60 The loss of water from surface water reservoirs or groundwater aquifers at a rate greater than that of recharge     ts
61 The progressive withdrawal of water from surface- or ground-water reservoirs at a rate greater than that of replenishment (see Recession curve and streamflow depletion )     ts
62 Method of computing a deduction to ACCOUNT for a reduction in value of extractable natural resources     ts
63 Removal of only the solids of the EDP (Electro-deposition process ) bath The solids are continuously deposited out while other ingredients remain and build up     ts
64deplete To empty or unload, as the vessels of the human system, by bloodletting or by medicine     ts
65deplete To reduce by destroying or consuming the vital powers of; to exhaust, as a country of its strength or resources, a treasury of money, etc - "Its reserves have been invaded and depleted."     ts
66deplete To deplete a stock or amount of something means to reduce it. substances that deplete the ozone layer + depleted de·plet·ed Robert E. Lee's worn and depleted army. + depletion de·ple·tion the depletion of underground water supplies. to reduce the amount of something that is present or available (depletus, past participle of deplere, from plere )     ts
67deplete To empty or unload, as the vessels of human system, by bloodletting or by medicine     ts
68deplete exhaust, consume, use up, empty, reduce  fiil     ts
69deplete use up (resources or materials); "this car consumes a lot of gas"; "We exhausted our savings"; "They run through 20 bottles of wine a week"     ts
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Some etymologies, pronunciations, function and usage date content for the English translation portion are from Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com. Thanks to Online Yunanca Dil Eğitimi for providing some parts of online greek dictionary. To contribute more resources please contact us. Visuals(images) are provided by Google Image Search API. Some parts of the dictionary is contributed by many users, thank you! The content on this site is for informational purposes only. Bu aramada depletion kelimesinin sözlük anlamı ve eşanlamı nedir, nasıl okunur hakkında bilgi verilmektedir. depletion kelimesinin etimolojik ve eşanlamları ile ilgili açıklamalar ve bilgiler eksiksiz ve hatasız olarak anılmamalıdır. Burada yer alan depletion kelimesi ile ilgili tüm açıklamalar bilgi amaçlıdır. Eksik ve hatalı çevirileri lütfen bildiriniz.

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