sand%C4%B1k teriminin İngilizce İngilizce sözlükte anlamı
- Sand Dancer
- A term for someone from South Shields
- Sand Dancers
- plural form of Sand Dancer
- Sand-Dancer
- Alternative spelling of Sand Dancer
- sand
- Of a light beige colour, like that of typical sand
- sand
- (often in plural sands) a beach or other expanse of sand
- sand
- To cover with sand
- sand
- Rock that is ground more finely than gravel, but is not as fine as silt (more formally, see grain sizes chart), forming beaches and deserts and also used in construction. Sand may be blown around by the wind; gravel is too heavy, and silt (on beaches) does not usually have time to dry out between tides
- sand
- A light beige colour, like that of typical sand
sand colour:.
- sand
- To abrade the surface of (something) with sand or sandpaper in order to smooth or clean it
Then what was the point of sanding my face off? — Space Ghost.
- sand
- Personal courage (used before or around 1920s)
- sand art
- A plastic or glass bottle filled with different colors of sand
- sand bars
- plural form of sand bar
- sand bath
- A piece of laboratory equipment consisting of a container fitted with heated sand, that is used to provide an even source of heat
- sand boxes
- plural form of sand box. an alternative spelling of sandbox
- sand cat
- A small wild cat, Felis margarita, distributed over African and Asian deserts
- sand cats
- plural form of sand cat
- sand crab
- a crab of the Hippoidea superfamily of decapod crustaceans
- sand crack
- A vertical fissure in the wall of a horse's hoof; a quarter crack
- sand dollar
- An echinoderm, of the order Clypeastroida, that has a flat, disk-shaped body with the mouth in a mid-ventral position, and lives in sand, on or near the surface
- sand dollars
- plural form of sand dollar
- sand down
- To treat or polish with sandpaper
- sand dune
- A large, semi-permanent mound of windblown sand, held together by specialized plants, common along seashores and in deserts
- sand dunes
- plural form of sand dune
- sand eel
- Any of various species of slim fish, resembling eels, especially of the genus Ammodytes
- sand flea
- A small tropical flea, Tunga penetrans; a chigoe
- sand flea
- Any of various small crustaceans of the order Amphipoda, that are found on beaches and jump like a flea
- sand fleas
- plural form of sand flea
- sand martin
- A migratory passerine bird of the swallow family, Riparia riparia
- sand martins
- plural form of sand martin
- sand nigger
- A person of Arabian or other Middle Eastern descent
- sand niggers
- plural form of sand nigger
- sand olive
- A shrub ranging from South Africa to New Zealand, Dodonaea angustifolia
- sand sedge
- A sedge species, Carex arenaria
- sand sedges
- plural form of sand sedge
- sand storms
- plural form of sand storm
- sand trap
- A basin that prevents the passage of sand etc into a drainage system
- sand trap
- A sand filled hollow, on a golf course, used as a hazard; a bunker
- sand traps
- plural form of sand trap
- sand wasp
- A predatory crabronid wasp that builds burrowlike nests in the ground
- sand wedge
- A golf club (an iron) with a heavy flange on the bottom, ideal for bunker shots
- sand wedges
- plural form of sand wedge
- sand whiting
- a fish, Sillago ciliata, found in tidal waters off Australia
- sand-art
- Attributive form of sand art
sand-art project.
- sand-martin
- a migratory passerine bird in the swallow family
But the red light was on the columns of the Parthenon, and the Greek women who were knitting their stockings and sometimes crying to a child to come and have the insects picked from its head were as jolly as sand-martins in the heat, quarrelling, scolding, suckling their babies, until the ships in the Piraeus fired their guns.
- sand dune
- hill of drifted sand, mound of sand, small hill made of sand
- sand
- {v} to cover or sprinkle with sand
- sand
- {n} a soft gravelly earth, barrne land
- sand box
- A litter box, sometimes called a sandbox, sand box, litter tray, litter pan, catbox, or cat box, is an indoor feces and urine disposal box for cats (as well as rabbits, snakes and other pets that naturally or through training will make use of such a repository) that are permitted free roam of a home but who cannot or do not always go outside to relieve themselves. Many owners of these animals prefer not to let them roam outside for fear that they might succumb to the elements or get hit by a car, so a cat litter box makes it possible to shelter pets from these risks
- sand spit
- (Coğrafya) A spit or sand spit is a deposition landform found off coasts. A spit is a type of bar or beach that develops where a re-entrant occurs, such as at a cove, headlands and known as longshore drift. Where the direction of the shore turns inland (reenters) the longshore current spreads out or dissipates. No longer able to carry the full load, much of the sediment is dropped. This cases a bar to build out from the shore, eventually becoming a spit
- Sand Creek Massacre
- or Chivington Massacre (Nov. 29, 1864) Surprise attack by U.S. troops on a Cheyenne camp. A force of 1,200 men, mostly Colorado volunteers under Col. John M. Chivington, attacked several hundred Cheyenne camped on Sand Creek near Fort Lyon in southeastern Colorado Territory. The Indians had been conducting peace negotiations with the fort's commander; when the attack began, they raised a white flag, but the troops continued to attack, massacring more than 200 of them. The slayings led to the Plains Indian wars
- sand
- fine particles of rock in a loose state
- sand
- To mix with sand for purposes of fraud; as, to sand sugar
- sand
- Unconsolidated rock and mineral particles with diameters ranging from 1/16 to 2 mm
- sand
- To drive upon the sand
- sand
- A single particle of such stone
- sand
- To sprinkle or cover with sand
- sand
- a loose material consisting of grains of rock or coral
- sand
- {f} scatter sand; cover with sand; rub or polish with sand; smooth with sandpaper
- sand
- Soil particles with diameter between 2 and 0 053 mm
- sand
- of siliceous stone, but not reduced to dust; comminuted stone in the form of loose grains, which are not coherent when wet
- sand
- Sands are a large area of sand, for example a beach. miles of golden sands
- sand
- If you sand a wood or metal surface, you rub sandpaper over it in order to make it smooth or clean. Sand the surface softly and carefully. Sand down means the same as sand. I was going to sand down the chairs and repaint them Simply sand them down with a fine grade of sandpaper. sand down to make a surface smooth by rubbing it with sandpaper or using a special piece of equipment. Mineral, rock, or soil particles that are
- sand
- Fine aggregate (any fraction below a No 8 sieve) resulting from natural disintegration and abrasion or processing of rock
- sand
- This usually refers to the filter medium used by a sand filter The grade most often specified by filter manufacturers is grade No 20 with a particle size of 45 to 55 mm (millimeters)
- sand
- A soil particle between 0 063 and 2 0mm in diameter (UK classification) A sandy soil contains 85% or more sand, up to 15% silt and up to 10% clay ( the total of course would not exceed 100%)
- sand
- coarse sediment typically found in areas exposed to currents and wave energy
- sand
- As a soil separate, individual rock or mineral fragments from 0 05 millimeter to 2 0 millimeters in diameter Most sand grains consist of quartz As a soil textural class, a soil that is 85 percent or more sand and not more than 10 percent clay
- sand
- 1 Particles between 2 00 and 0 05 mm diameter, or one of several separates such as coarse or medium sand; a soil textural class 2 Mineral or rock fragments that range in diameter from 2 00 to 0 02 mm in the international system, or 2 00 to 0 05 mm in the USDA system
- sand
- The sand in the hourglass; hence, a moment or interval of time; the term or extent of one's life
- sand
- 0008-0.08 in. (0.02-2 mm) in diameter. Most rock-forming minerals are found in sand, but quartz is by far the most common. Most sands also contain a small quantity of feldspar, as well as white mica. All sands contain small quantities of heavy rock-forming minerals, including garnet, tourmaline, zircon, rutile, topaz, pyroxenes, and amphiboles. In the pottery and glassmaking industries very pure quartz sands are used as a source of silica. Similar sands are used for lining the hearths of steel furnaces. Molds used in foundries for casting metal are made of sand with a clay binder. Quartz and garnet sands are used extensively as abrasives. Among ordinary sand's many uses, it is a basic ingredient of mortar, cement, and concrete. See also tar sand. black sand Great Sand Dunes National Monument Sand Creek Massacre sand dollar sand dune sand flea sand fly sand shark Sand George tar sand bituminous sand White Sands National Monument
- sand
- To bury (oysters) beneath drifting sand or mud
- sand
- Loose granular material resulting from the natural disintegration of rock or from the crushing of friable sandstone, passing through a #4 sieve but predominantly retained on a #200 sieve; manufactured sand is the fine material resulting from the crushing and classification by screening, or otherwise, of rock, gravel or blast furnace slag
- sand
- Fine particles of stone, esp
- sand
- Loose particles of hard, broken rock or minerals In observing, sand is reported when particles of sand are raised to sufficient height that reduces visibility It is reported as "SA" in an observation and on the METAR
- sand
- Loose particles of rock or mineral (sediment) that range in size from 0 0625 - 2 0 millimeters in diameter
- sand
- Tracts of land consisting of sand, like the deserts of Arabia and Africa; also, extensive tracts of sand exposed by the ebb of the tide
- sand
- 1 A soil textural class including soil particles between 0 05 and 2 0 millimeters in diameter 2 A term sometimes used to indicate sediment
- sand
- a beach or other expanse of sand
- sand
- Because of the relative large size of sand particles ( 05-2 0 mm), sandy soils have trouble holding water and nutrients They are commonly deficient in calcium and magnesium Adding humus to sandy soils can help When mixed with a heavier soil (one that is largely comprised of clay), sand can help provide aeration Sand is also commonly mixed with seed for broadcasting
- sand
- Mineral particle with a size between 0 06 and 2 0 millimeters in diameter Also see clay and silt
- sand
- Soil composed of large particles Mitawan in the Ojibwe
- sand
- rub with sandpaper; "sandpaper the wooden surface"
- sand
- Sediment particles mainly or quartz, with a diameter of between 0 062 mm and 2 mm, generally classified as fine, medium, coarse or very coarse
- sand
- {i} fine grains of rock; beach, area covered primarily with sand
- sand
- Mineral soil particles 05 to 2 0 mm in size
- sand
- rock particles, 0 08-4 6 mm (0 003-0 18 inches) in diameter
- sand
- Inorganic particles between 0 05 (and 1/16) and 2 0 millimeters in diameter Also soil that contains 85 percent or more sand and a percentage of silt plus 1 5 times the percentage of clay that does not exceed 15
- sand
- Sand is a substance that looks like powder, and consists of extremely small pieces of stone. Some deserts and many beaches are made up of sand. They all walked barefoot across the damp sand to the water's edge. grains of sand
- sand
- Sediment consisting of mineral particles in the range of 0 062 to 2 0 millimeters
- sand
- fortitude and determination; "he didn't have the guts to try it"
- sand
- The most common form of silica used in making glass It is collected from the seashore or, preferably, from deposits that have fewer impurities For most present-day glassmaking, sand must have a low iron co ntent Before being used in a batch, it is thoroughly washed, heated to remove carbonaceous matter, and screened to obtain uniformly small grains
- sand
- French writer known for works concerning women's rights and independence (1804-1876)
- sand
- Sand is the most common form of silica used in making glass It is an impure silica, but should have a low content of iron and other impurities, should be washed and heated, and screened for uniformity of grain Glass mythology holds that fires on the beaches of the Nile gave people the first indications of the possibily of making glass
- sand
- Courage; pluck; grit
- sand
- French writer known for works concerning women's rights and independence (1804-1876) a loose material consisting of grains of rock or coral
- sand
- loose grains of rock, sized 0 02-2 00 mm in diameter, consisting chiefly of quartz, but owing their varying colour to mixtures of other minerals
- sand bar
- a long pile of sand in a river or the ocean, formed by the movement of the water
- sand bar
- a bar of sand
- sand bar
- reef, sand bank
- sand bath
- deep tub filled with sand
- sand bed
- {i} thick layer of sand which is set down naturally or in an artificial manner
- sand blackberry
- stiff shrubby blackberry of the eastern United States (Connecticut to Florida)
- sand blasting
- Compressed air forces an abrasive material (resembling sand) through a nozzle on to the surface of the glass This process removes the surface of the glass, which gives the sandblasted area a frosted look Sash A wood perimeter around the glass which allows some independent movement from the frame (not direct set) Sash has two types of components: Stiles-the vertical perimeter pieces Rails-the horizontal perimeter pieces Sash Opening The space described by the interior of a window frame It is bounded by the interior surface of the frames Jamb liners or hardware adapters must be disregarded (Primary use of this dimension is for the Replacement Double Hung System)
- sand blasting
- or SAND ETCHING: technique in which sand or grit is forced through high pressure to etch a pattern
- sand blasting
- A means of producing a matte or frosted finish on gold and other metals This is accomplished by holding the work against a stream of sharp sand driven by a jet of compressed air
- sand blasting
- The process of surface cleaning and roughening that provides a mechanical "tooth" to aid coating adhesion Media include aluminum oxide, even crushed walnut shells The medium must be chosen to match the substrate and the foreign material on the substrate to be removed
- sand blasting
- Procedure for cleaning of metal surfaces, for which fine silica sand is blasted through a nozzle onto the surface by means of compressed air to remove scale as well as other coverings
- sand box
- box filled with sand where children can play
- sand cast
- pour molten metal into a mold of sand
- sand castle
- form of a castle made out of sand
- sand castle
- A sand castle is a pile of sand, usually shaped like a castle, which children make when they are playing on the beach
- sand cat
- a desert-dwelling wildcat
- sand cherry
- small straggling American cherry growing on sandy soil and having minute scarcely edible purplish-black fruit
- sand crack
- upright crack in the hoof of a horse that often results in lameness
- sand crack
- a fissure in the wall of a horse's hoof often causing lameness
- sand crack
- A fissure in the side of a horse's hoof, often causing lameness
- sand cricket
- large wingless nocturnal grasshopper that burrows in loose soil along the Pacific coast of the United States
- sand dab
- Any of several small food fishes of the genus Citharichthys of Pacific waters, related to and resembling the flounders
- sand dab
- small food fishes of the Pacific coast of North America the lean flesh of a small flounder from the Pacific coast of North America
- sand devil's claw
- alternatively placed in genus Martynia
- sand dollar
- flattened disklike sea urchins that live on sandy bottoms
- sand dollar
- Any echinoderm (order Clypeastroida, class Echinoidea) that has a coinlike, thin-edged body. Five "petals" spread out from the center of the upper body. It burrows in sand, feeding on organic particles wafted to the mouth, located in the center of the body's underside. Small spines covering the body are used for digging and crawling. Tests (external skeletons) of the common sand dollar (Echinarachnius parma), which often wash up on beaches in North America and Japan, are 2-4 in. (5-10 cm) in diameter
- sand dropseed
- erect smooth grass of sandy places in eastern North America
- sand dune
- A sand dune is a hill of sand near the sea or in a sand desert. = dune. a hill formed of sand in a desert or near the sea. Hill, mound, or ridge of windblown sand or other loose material such as clay particles. Dunes are commonly associated with desert regions and seacoasts, and there are large areas of dunes in nonglacial parts of Antarctica
- sand dune
- a ridge of sand created by the wind; found in deserts or near lakes and oceans
- sand dune
- A hill or ridge of sand piled up by the wind commonly found along shores, along some river valleys, and generally where there is dry surface sand during some part of the year
- sand dune
- A DUNE formed of SAND
- sand dune
- A hill or ridge of aeolian sand deposits with a minimum height of less than one meter and a maximum height of about 50 meters Found in hot deserts and along sandy coastlines
- sand dune
- n a mound, ridge, or hill of loose sand, heaped up by the wind
- sand dunes
- Mounds of sand, usually on the beach facing the surf Containing specific types of vegetation The faster the winds, the bigger the dunes
- sand dunes
- sandy hills at the edge of the beach
- sand eel
- sand lance: very small silvery eellike schooling fishes that burrow into sandy beaches
- sand eel
- type of small fish that resembles an eel
- sand flea
- or beach flea Hopping terrestrial crustacean (family Talitridae). The European sand flea (Talitrus saltator) is about 0.6 in. (1.5 cm) long. The long-horned sand flea (T. longicornis), found on the North American Atlantic coast, has antennae the same length as the waxy white body, up to 1 in. (2.5 cm) long. During the day, sand fleas lie buried near the high-tide mark; at night, they forage for organic debris. The common sand flea (Orchestia agilis, or platensis) lives along Atlantic coasts of Europe and the Americas
- sand fly
- any of various small dipterous flies; blood-sucking females can transmit sandfly fever and leishmaniasis
- sand fly
- Any of various small biting flies of the genus Phlebotomus of tropical areas, some of which transmit diseases. a small fly that bites people and lives on beaches. Any of several species in the dipteran family Phlebotomidae (sometimes considered part of the family Psychodidae) with aquatic larvae that live in the intertidal zone of coastal beaches, in mud, or in wet organic debris. The genus Phlebotomus transmits the pappataci fever virus, and in parts of South America, Africa, and Asia it carries the protozoan parasites that cause kala azar, Oriental sore, espundia, and bartonellosis. The name is also used for species of the blackfly and biting midge families
- sand glass
- {i} hourglass, device for measuring time which consists of two glass bulbs joined by a narrow passage through which a quantity of sand or liquid passes in one hour
- sand grouse
- Any of various pigeonlike birds of the genus Pterocles and related genera, of arid and semiarid regions of the Old World
- sand hill
- {i} dune; hill of sand
- sand hog
- {i} person who digs tunnel under a river ; one who works or digs in sand; one who works underground
- sand in the eyes
- blindness, being unable to see properly or clearly
- sand lance
- very small silvery eellike schooling fishes that burrow into sandy beaches
- sand lance
- Any of several small marine fishes of the genus Ammodytes, having a slender body with a forked tail fin and often burrowing in the sand of tidelands. Also called launce, sand eel
- sand leek
- European leek cultivated and used like leeks
- sand lily
- A low-growing plant (Leucocrinum montanum) of the western United States, having grasslike leaves and fragrant, white, star-shaped flowers
- sand lizard
- a common and widely distributed lizard of Europe and central Asia
- sand martin
- {i} tiny European songbird that nests in tunnels dug in sand banks (related to the swallow)
- sand myrtle
- low-growing evergreen shrub of New Jersey to Florida grown for its many white star-shaped flowers and glossy foliage
- sand painting
- a painting done by Amerindians (especially Navaho); made of fine colored sands on a neutral background
- sand rat
- southern European gerbil small nearly naked African mole rat of desert areas
- sand sage
- silver-haired shrub of central and southern United States and Mexico; a troublesome weed on rangelands
- sand sedge
- European maritime sedge naturalized along Atlantic coast of United States; rootstock has properties of sarsaparilla
- sand shark
- A shark of the genus Carcharias, especially C. taurus, found mainly in shallow waters of the temperate and tropical Atlantic. Any of about six species of shallow-water, bottom-dwelling sharks in the genus Odontaspis (family Odontaspididae), found along tropical and temperate coastlines of all oceans. They are 10-20 ft (3-6 m) long and are brown or gray above, paler below. Voracious but generally sluggish, they have long, slim, pointed teeth and prey on fishes and invertebrates. Two species, the sand tiger (O. taurus) of the Atlantic and the gray nurse (O. arenarius) of Australia, are potentially dangerous
- sand snake
- small North American burrowing snake
- sand sole
- a common flatfish of the Pacific coast of North America
- sand spurry
- prostrate weedy herb with tiny pink flowers; widespread throughout Europe and Asia on sand dunes and heath and coastal cliffs; naturalized in eastern North America
- sand stargazer
- small pallid fishes of shoal tropical waters of North America and South America having eyes on stalks atop head; they burrow in sand to await prey
- sand storm
- storm of sand carried along in the wind
- sand table
- mound of sand used for practice
- sand tiger
- shallow-water shark with sharp jagged teeth found on both sides of Atlantic; sometimes dangerous to swimmers
- sand trap
- Alternate name for a bunker
- sand trap
- (aka: "trap", "bunker", "sand bunker") another commonly used term for a sand-filled depression in the ground Example: "His approach shot caught the sand trap in front of the green "
- sand trap
- (Irrigation) A device, often a simple enlargement in a ditch or conduit, for arresting the heavier particles of sand and silt carried by the water ADVANCE \x 540
- sand trap
- (also "trap, bunker, sand bunker") another commonly used term for a sand-filled bunker - a depression in the ground filled with a prepared surface of sand or similar Example: His approach shot caught the sand trap/trap/bunker/sand bunker in front of the flag
- sand trap
- Dirt areas, occurring naturally or man-made, which, by their nature, show sign well
- sand trap
- Usually, open surface soft dirt areas, occurring naturally or man-made, which by their nature will impress, depress or compress easily leaving obvious footfall evidence See Also: Track Trap
- sand trap
- Refer to bunker
- sand trap
- A hazard on a golf course consisting of a depression partly filled with sand
- sand trap
- a hazard on a golf course
- sand trap
- A sand bunker
- sand verbena
- Any of several herbs of the genus Abronia, of western North America, having fragrant, usually red, yellow, or white flowers that are grouped in long-stalked heads
- sand verbena
- any of various plants of the genus Abronia of western North America and Mexico having flowers resembling verbena
- sand wash
- {i} process of washing fabric or clothes with sand to soften the look of the material
- sand wedge
- a wedge used to get out of sand traps
- sand-blind
- partially blind, having partial vision loss
- sand-lily
- type of flower, wild flower from the narcissus family
- bituminous sand
- oil sand
- brain sand
- corpora arenacea
- bury one's head in the sand
- To deliberately ignore the reality of a situation
- draw a line in the sand
- To indicate the level at which something is unacceptable
After hearing about the drunk and disorderly behaviour at the military base, the commander drew a line in the sand to prevent unauthorised personnel from gaining access.
- draw a line in the sand
- To make a clear distinction between two different things
We often talk about a drawing a line in the sand between freedom of speech and defamation.
- draw a line in the sand
- To create an artificial boundary between two places to divide two or more people from each other
After having been on the deserted island for the past three months, the survivors were getting angry with each other and decided to draw a line in the sand to indicate where the first group and the second group could live.
- green sand
- An aggregate of sand, bentonite clay, pulverized coal, and water, used in making moulds for metal casting
- head-in-the-sand
- Exhibiting disregard or denial of a problem or threat
The head-in-the-sand approach to environmentalism seldom improves matters.
- line in the sand
- a defining moment, a cutoff point
- oil sand
- A relatively loose sandstone, or porous carbonate rock, impregnated with bitumen
- pound sand
- To engage in a futile activity
After he spoke, the boss basically told him to go pound sand.
- tar sand
- oil sand
- titanium sand
- Any of various sands that are an industrial source of titanium minerals such as leucoxene, rutile and ilmenite
- blood and sand
- (deyim) (Blood and sand!) An exclamation of surprise or anger. A mild and antiquated curse