Translation "jama" to English

jama{feminine}
barrow · berry · burrow · cavern · chasm · crevasse · croft · dale · delf · dell · delph · den · hole · pit · pitfall · scoop · trench
jamac{masculine}
bail · sponsor
Jamajka{feminine}{geology}
Jamaica

jama

feminineIPA: / jama /
Translate 'jama' into
Words nearby

jalov · jalova krava · jalovina · jalovo · jalovost · Jalta · jam · jama · Jamajka · jamac · jamb · jambski

English translation

barrow

nounIPA: / bæroʊ /

1. A cart for carrying small loads; has handles and one or more wheels; SYN. garden cart, lawn cart, wheelbarrow.
2. The quantity that a barrow will hold; SYN. barrowful.

These ones, interestingly, are 400 miles north of here outside Barrow-in-Furness in Cumbria.
Source: TED2020
Last May, I spent nine days living up in Barrow, Alaska, the northernmost settlement in the United States, with a family of Inupiat Eskimos, documenting their annual spring whale hunt.
Source: TED2020
This is in the Patkotak's family living room in their house in Barrow. The boxed wine they served us.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: barrowful · burial mound · garden cart · grave mound · lawn cart · tumulus · wheelbarrow

berry

nounbotanicsIPA: / beri /

(Homonym: bury).
1. A pulpy and usually edible small fruit having any of various structures: e.g. strawberry or raspberry or blueberry.
2. Any of numerous small edible pulpy fruits either simple (grape; blueberry) or aggregate (blackberry; raspberry).
Fleshy, many-seeded fruit that does not split open to release the seeds. The outer layer of tissue, the exocarp, forms an outer skin that is often brightly colored to attract birds to eat the fruit and
thus disperse the seeds. Examples of berries are the tomato and the grape.
A pepo is a type of berry that has developed a hard exterior, such as the cucumber fruit. Another is the hesperidium, which has a thick, leathery outer layer, such as that found in citrus fruits, and fluid-containing vesicles within, which form the segments.

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This berry's tasty.
Source: Tatoeba
Storybook Dads began in 2003, when Sharon Berry, a civilian worker in a prison, realized just how much many prisoners wanted to stay in contact with their children.
Source: TED2020
(Video) Jack Berry: Boys and girls, I think you all know how to get your magic windows up on the set, you just get them out.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: Berry · Charles Edward Berry · Chuck Berry

burrow

nounIPA: / bɝːoʊ /

ETYM See Borough.
(Homonym: burrow).
A hole in the ground made by an animal for shelter; SYN. tunnel.

The rabbit plunged into its burrow and disappeared.
Source: Tatoeba
These are actually used to burrow into the bone and collect bone marrow or sample bone lesions.
Source: TED2020
It allows anybody to go there and burrow down.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: tunnel

cavern

nounIPA: / kævərn /

ETYM Latin caverna, from cavus hollow: cf. French caverne.
1. A large cave or a large chamber in a cave.
2. Any large dark enclosed space.

This is a cavern.
Source: Tatoeba
A dragon lives inside the cavern.
Source: Tatoeba
This remote cavern is known only to him.
Source: Tatoeba

chasm

nounIPA: / kæzəm /

ETYM Latin chasma, Greek, from chainein to gape, to open wide. Related to Chaos.
A deep opening in the earth's surface.

And we realized that there was a giant chasm between the state of the art of technology in 2004 and where we needed it to be.
Source: TED2020
Sit down, and tell me how you came alive out of that dreadful chasm.
Source: Tatoeba
On the other side, the vast majority of people look across the chasm and shake their heads, like, "Why you gotta be so depressed?"
Source: TED2020

crevasse

nounIPA: / kʁəvasˈe /

ETYM French See Crevice.
A deep fissure.
Deep chasm in glacier.
Deep crack in the surface of a glacier; it can reach several meters in depth. Crevasses often occur where a glacier flows over the break o
f a slope, because the upper layers of ice are unable to stretch and cracks result. Crevasses may also form at the edges of glaciers owing to friction with the bedrock.

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This is me crossing a crevasse.
Source: TED2020
That's another crevasse.
Source: TED2020
So I borrowed them, adapted them for ice, and then I had a numeric model for how a crevasse can fracture when filled with water from the aquifer.
Source: TED2020

croft

nounIPA: / krɒft /

ETYM AS. croft; akin to Dutch kroft hillock; cf. Gael. croit hump, croft.
(Great Britain) A small farm worked by a crofter.
Small farm in the Highlands of Scotland, traditionally farming common land cooperatively; the 1886 Crofters Act gav
e security of tenure to crofters. Today, although grazing land is still shared, arable land is typically enclosed.
Crofting is the only form of subsistence farming found in the UK.

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And I remember reading, after the Lara Croft movies, how Angelina Jolie would go home completely black and blue.
Source: TED2020
Of course, they covered that with make-up, because Lara Croft did all those same stunts but she doesn't get black and blue, because she has sprezzatura.
Source: TED2020

dale

nounIPA: / deɪl /

ETYM AS. dael; akin to LG., Dutch, Swed., Dan., OS., and Goth. dal, Icel. dalr, Old High Germ. tal, German thal, and perh. to Greek tholos a rotunda, Skr. dhâra depth. Related to Dell.
(British) An open river valley (in a hilly area).

This is a jet landing at San Francisco, by Bruce Dale.
Source: TED2020
And before you do it, read Dale Carnegie, "How to Win Friends and Influence People" I'm totally serious.
Source: TED2020
We've also been lucky to have people like Brandi Chastain, the women's soccer icon, NASCAR's Dale Earnhardt Jr.
Source: TED2020

delf

nounIPA: / delf /

ETYM AS. delf a delving, digging. Related to Delve.
(British colloquialism) An excavation; usually a quarry or mine.
Drain; ditch; excavation.

dell

nounIPA: / del /

ETYM AS. del, akin to Eng. dale; cf. Dutch delle, del, low ground. Related to Dale.
A small wooded hollow; SYN. dingle.

Michelangelo's David can be seen at the Galleria Dell'Accademia in Florence.
Source: Tatoeba
Dell came out with MP3 players and PDAs, and they make great quality products, and they can make perfectly well-designed products and nobody bought one.
Source: TED2020
In fact, talking about it now, we can't even imagine buying an MP3 player from Dell.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: dingle

delph

nounslang, dialectIPA: / delf /

den

nounIPA: / den /

ETYM AS. denn; perh. akin to German tenne floor, thrashing floor, and to AS. denu valley.
A room that is comfortable and secluded.

Don't set foot in the lion's den!
Source: Tatoeba
The "Red Dragon" is a well-known gambling and opium den.
Source: Tatoeba
On the red tiles in my family's den I would dance and sing to the made-for-TV movie "Gypsy," starring Bette Midler.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: hideaway · hideout · lair

hole

nounIPA: / hoʊl /

ETYM Old Eng. hol, hole, AS. hol, hole, cavern, from hol, hollow.
(Homonym: whole).
1. A depression hollowed out of solid matter; SYN. hollow.
2. A fault.
3. An opening delibe
rately made in or through something.
4. An opening into or through something.
5. An unoccupied space.
6. One unit of play from tee to green on a golf course.

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If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.
Source: Tatoeba
However, this black hole is so far away from us, that from Earth, this ring appears incredibly small the same size to us as an orange on the surface of the moon.
Source: TED2020
We might one day see a shadow a black hole can cast on a very bright background, but we haven't yet.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: cakehole · fix · gob · golf hole · hollow · jam · kettle of fish · maw · mess · muddle · pickle · trap · yap

pit

nounIPA: / pɪt /

ETYM Old Eng. pit, put, as. pytt a pit, hole, Latin puteus a well, pit.
1. A concavity in a surface (especially an anatomical depression); SYN. fossa.
2. A sizeable hole (usually in the ground); SYN. cavity.
3. A trap in th
e form of a concealed hole; SYN. pitfall.
4. An open-surface excavation for extracting stone or slate; SYN. quarry, stone pit.
5. The stone-like seed at the core of certain fruits.

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Now, of course, in a mosh pit it's hard to specify a destination.
Source: TED2020
He wanted a little more bombast, so he increased the size of the orchestra pit so he could get more low-end instruments in there.
Source: TED2020
It's the first time I've swallowed a peach pit!
Source: Tatoeba

pitfall

nounIPA: / pɪtfɒl /

An unforeseen or unexpected difficulty.

But I think the biggest conceptual pitfall that cybertopians made is when it comes to digital natives, people who have grown up online.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: booby trap · pit

scoop

nounIPA: / skˈuːp /

1. A hollow concave shape made by removing something; SYN. pocket.
2. A large ladle
3. The quantity a scoop will hold; SYN. scoopful.
4. The shovel or bucket of dredge or backhoe; SYN. scoop shovel.

You just scoop the water up.
Source: TED2020
What's the scoop on your new boyfriend?
Source: Tatoeba
If you look out your window and see Longs Peak you're probably familiar with it now, scoop up Longs Peak and put it out in space.
Source: TED2020

trench

noungrammarIPA: / trentʃ /

ETYM Old Eng. trenche, French tranchée. Related to Trench.
(Irregular plural: trenches).
1. A ditch dug as a fortification having a parapet
of the excavated earth.
2. A long steep-sided depression in the ocean floor.
3. Any long cut made in the ground.

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So when the First World War broke out, the result was the trench warfare that lasted longer than anybody had expected.
Source: TED2020
There were two candidates, one off of Western Australia and one in the Java Trench.
Source: TED2020
We go from the trench warfare of the First World War to the Maginot Line of the Second World War, and then we go into the Cold War, the Iron Curtain, the Berlin Wall.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: deep · oceanic abyss

jamac

masculineIPA: / jamats /
Translate 'jamac' into
Words nearby

jalovo · jalovost · Jalta · jam · jama · Jamajka · jamac · jamb · jambski · jamica · jamica na obrazu · jamičast · jamski gas · jamstvo · jamčenje · jamčiti

English translation

bail

nounlawIPA: / bˈaj /

(Criminal law) Money that must be forfeited by the bondsman if an accused person fails to appear in court for trial; SYN. bail bond, bond.
(Homonym: bale).
A security, bonds, or money deposited with the court to obtain the temporary release of an arrested person, on the assurance that the person will obey the court, as by attending a legal proceeding at a stated time and place. If the person does not attend, the bail may be forfeited.
While the US Constitution nominally guarantee
s individuals right to reasonable bail, in effect availability of bail and amounts of security necessary to secure bail are set by judges, based on judges' evaluations of the likelihood that a defendant will appear, or likelihood of further criminal acts or danger to the public, on the severity of the charge, and on the economic standing of the accused.

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Imagine our politicians using dance to explain why we must invade a foreign country or bail out an investment bank.
Source: TED2020
You can then click on the screen and be directed to the donation page of The Bail Project, a fund that raises money for people who cannot afford bail.
Source: TED2020
But one last thing: those people, sitting in America, in those jail cells, in every corner of the country, who are held in jail on bail bondage, right now they need a lifeline today.
Source: TED2020

sponsor

nounIPA: / spɔ̃sˈɔʁ /

ETYM Latin, from spondere, sponsum, to engage one's self. Related to Spose.
1. One who offers sponsorship to another.
2. One who, at the baptism of an infant, guarantees its religious education; a godfather or godmother.

Why? Because strong performance currency raises your level of visibility in the environment, as I said earlier, such that a sponsor may be attracted to you.
Source: TED2020
If they think the company is a good idea, they get the first crack at investing, and then sponsor the company’s initial public offering, or IPO.
Source: TED2020
So let me introduce this concept of currency and talk to you about how it impacts your ability to get a sponsor.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: patron · presenter · supporter

Jamajka

femininegeologyIPA: / jamajka /
Definition and meaning

Ostrvska država u Karipskom moru, zapadno od Haitija.

Words nearby

jalova krava · jalovina · jalovo · jalovost · Jalta · jam · jama · Jamajka · jamac · jamb · jambski · jamica

English translation

Jamaica

noungeologyIPA: / dʒəmeɪkə /

Island in the Caribbean Sea, S of Cuba and W of Haiti.
government
The 1962 constitution follows closely the unwritten British model, with a resident constitutional head of state, the governor-general, representing the British monarch and appointing a prime minister and cabinet, collectively responsible to the legislature. This consists of two chambers, an appointed 21-member senate and a 60-member elected house of representatives. Normally, 13 of the senators are appointed on the advice of the prime minister and 8 on the advice of the leader of the opposition. Members of the house are elected by universal suffrage for a five-year term, but the house is subject to dissolution within that period.
history
Before the arrival of Christopher Columbus 1494, the island was inhabited by Arawak Indians. From 1509 to 1655 it was a Spanish colony, and after this was in British hands until 1959, when it was granted internal self-government, achieving full independence within the Commonwealth 1962.
after independence
The two leading political figures in the early days of independence were Alexander Bustamante, leader of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP), and Norman Manley, leader of the People's National Party (PNP). The JLP won the 1962 and 1967 elections, led by Bustamante's successor, Hugh Shearer, but the PNP, under Norman Manley's son Michael, was successful 1972. He advocated social reform and economic independence from the industrialized world. Despite high unemployment, Manley was returned to power 1976 with an increased majority, but by 1980 the economy had deteriorated, and, rejecting the conditions attached to a loan from the International Monetary Fund, Manley sought support for his policies of economic self-reliance.
political violence
The 1980 general election campaign wa
s extremely violent, despite calls by Manley and the leader of the JLP, Edward Seaga, for moderation. The outcome was a decisive victory for the JLP, with 51 of the 60 seats in the house of representatives. Seaga thus received a mandate for a return to a renewal of links with the US and an emphasis on free enterprise. He severed diplomatic links with Cuba 1981. In 1983 Seaga called an early, snap election, with the opposition claiming they had been given insufficient time to nominate their candidates. The JLP won all 60 seats. There were violent demonstrations when the new parliament was inaugurated, and the PNP said it would continue its opposition outside the parliamentary arena. In 1989 Manley and the PNP were elected. The new prime minister pledged to pursue moderate economic policies and improve relations with the US. In 1992 Manley resigned the premiership on the grounds of ill health. P J Patterson, the former finance minister, was chosen as Manley's successor and i
n the 1993 general election he led the PNP to a landslide victory.
1. A country on the island of Jamaica; became independent of England in 1962; much poverty; the major industry is tourism.
2. An island in the West Indies south of Cuba and west of Haiti.
3. City in Iowa (USA); zip code 50128.

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Never would India have said, "I want a player to play one game for me, and I will use a corporate jet to send him all the way back to Kingston, Jamaica to play a game."
Source: TED2020
The coral reefs of the north coast of Jamaica have a few percent live coral cover and a lot of seaweed and slime.
Source: TED2020
And I ended up in Jamaica, in the West Indies, where the coral reefs were really among the most extraordinary, structurally, that I ever saw in my life.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: Jamaica

Similar words to "jama"

jam · Jao meni! · ja sam · jačina · Jemen · jen · ječam · ječmen · ječno · jin · joman · jomani · jomen · jon · juan · južni · južno · jun · june
Translation may not be correct. Examples are from unreviewed external source.