释义 |
Definition of marshland in English: marshlandnoun ˈmɑːʃləndˈmɑrʃˌlænd mass nounalso marshlandsLand consisting of marshes. 沼泽地 acres of meadows and marshlands as modifier marshland landscapes Example sentencesExamples - Roads penetrate deeper and deeper into what were once pampas, dense forests and marshland.
- And under the benign gaze of such governments, the poor have filled up marshland, resurfaced uneven land, all with their own labour, and built their homes.
- The rest is designated as prairie and marshland, winding throughout the development and sometimes right up to back porches.
- Mostly these long-term anoxia-tolerant species inhabit bogs, wet marshlands, pools, river banks, and salt marshes or else are accustomed to survive long periods under a closed ice-layer.
- The wetland park, which will soon be the animal's permanent home, will cover 64 hectares of land and include tropical marshland.
- The bayous and marshland of southern Louisiana host one of the largest agglomerations of industry in North America.
- This, he said, is backed up by remnants of nibbled grass in the mound, which he thinks shows livestock were brought to graze on land that was once boggy marshland.
- The fenlands of eastern England were originally marshland, but have been turned into rich farmland by efficient drainage.
- And off to the right, you can see all the wetlands and marshlands that lead to the Lakes.
- Acadian farms, dependent on dikes and the development of marshland, were self-contained and achieved high levels of production of cereals and apples, and then of livestock.
- Acres of the perfectly uniform crops along the fens, the reclaimed marshlands of Cambridgeshire, are ripening, but until the rain lifts the harvesters will not be leaving their homes.
- New Orleans is a city built on silt and drained marshland, positioned at the mouth of the Mississippi River.
- At high tide, seawater from the Atlantic floods in, spreads out over the marshes, and slowly, while the marshlands are warmed by sun and whipped by wind, the seawater becomes saltier and saltier.
- ‘The drainage of the marshlands destroyed the wintering and staging habitat of several million migratory waterbirds,’ he said.
- He was charged with many aspects of land management in the marshlands he knows so well.
- Thought to be named after the cranes which feed on them, cranberries proliferate in the boggy marshlands of the Canadian and North American seaboard.
- In seeking to set aside actual swamp and marshland, local advocates found that while wetlands abounded, they were highly altered by human action.
- To the west, a thick patch of forest stretched all the way to the sea, punctuated in several places by vast marshlands and winding rivers.
- The large areas of woodland, moors, marshlands and lowlands around east Lancashire were obviously difficult to manage from the castle.
- Louisiana is known for its bayous and marshlands.
Definition of marshland in US English: marshlandnounˈmɑrʃˌlændˈmärSHˌland also marshlandsLand consisting of marshes. 沼泽地 acres of meadows and marshlands as modifier marshland landscapes Example sentencesExamples - Acadian farms, dependent on dikes and the development of marshland, were self-contained and achieved high levels of production of cereals and apples, and then of livestock.
- The wetland park, which will soon be the animal's permanent home, will cover 64 hectares of land and include tropical marshland.
- And under the benign gaze of such governments, the poor have filled up marshland, resurfaced uneven land, all with their own labour, and built their homes.
- New Orleans is a city built on silt and drained marshland, positioned at the mouth of the Mississippi River.
- Mostly these long-term anoxia-tolerant species inhabit bogs, wet marshlands, pools, river banks, and salt marshes or else are accustomed to survive long periods under a closed ice-layer.
- The rest is designated as prairie and marshland, winding throughout the development and sometimes right up to back porches.
- In seeking to set aside actual swamp and marshland, local advocates found that while wetlands abounded, they were highly altered by human action.
- The bayous and marshland of southern Louisiana host one of the largest agglomerations of industry in North America.
- ‘The drainage of the marshlands destroyed the wintering and staging habitat of several million migratory waterbirds,’ he said.
- The fenlands of eastern England were originally marshland, but have been turned into rich farmland by efficient drainage.
- Thought to be named after the cranes which feed on them, cranberries proliferate in the boggy marshlands of the Canadian and North American seaboard.
- He was charged with many aspects of land management in the marshlands he knows so well.
- The large areas of woodland, moors, marshlands and lowlands around east Lancashire were obviously difficult to manage from the castle.
- And off to the right, you can see all the wetlands and marshlands that lead to the Lakes.
- At high tide, seawater from the Atlantic floods in, spreads out over the marshes, and slowly, while the marshlands are warmed by sun and whipped by wind, the seawater becomes saltier and saltier.
- Louisiana is known for its bayous and marshlands.
- Acres of the perfectly uniform crops along the fens, the reclaimed marshlands of Cambridgeshire, are ripening, but until the rain lifts the harvesters will not be leaving their homes.
- This, he said, is backed up by remnants of nibbled grass in the mound, which he thinks shows livestock were brought to graze on land that was once boggy marshland.
- To the west, a thick patch of forest stretched all the way to the sea, punctuated in several places by vast marshlands and winding rivers.
- Roads penetrate deeper and deeper into what were once pampas, dense forests and marshland.
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