Translation "jaz" to English

jaz{masculine}
canal · chasm · culvert · gap · precipice · rift · trough
jazavac{masculine}{zoology}
badger · bauson · bawson · brock · das
jazavci{plural}
dassen
jazavčar{masculine}{zoology}
dachshund · wiener dog
jazbina{feminine}
burrow · den · gape · kennel · lair · nest

jaz

masculineIPA: / jaz /
Definition and meaning

Prokop, kanal.

Translate 'jaz' into
English translation

canal

nounIPA: / kanˈal /

Artificial waterway constructed for drainage, irrigation, or navigation. Irrigation canals carry water for irrigation from rivers, reservoirs, or wells, and are designed to maintain an even flow of water over the whole length. Navigation and ship canals are constructed at one level between locks, and frequently link with rivers or sea inlets to form a waterway system. The Suez Canal 1869 and the Panama Canal 1914 eliminated long trips around continents and dramatically shortened shipping routes.
Irrigation canals fed from the Nile have maintained life in Egypt since the earliest times; the division of the waters of the Upper Indus and its tributaries, which form an extensive system in Pakistan and Punjab, India, was, for more than ten years, a major cause of dispute between India and Pakistan, settled by a treaty 1960; the Murray basin, Victoria, Australia, and the Imperial and Central Valley projects in California, US, are examples of 19th- and 20th-century irrigation canal development.
Probably the oldest ship canal to be still in use, as well as the longest, is the Grand Canal in China, which links Tianjin and Hangzhou and connects the Huang He (Yellow River) and Chang Jiang. It was originally built in three stages 485 BC–AD 283, reaching a total length of 1,780 km/1,107 mi. Large sections silted up in later years, but the entire system was dredged, widened, and rebuilt 1958–72 in conjunction with work on flood protection, irrigation, and hydroelectric schemes. It carries millions of metric tons of freight every year.
Where speed is not a prime factor, the cost-effectiveness of transporting goods by canal has encouraged a revival and Belgium, France, Germany, and the USSR are among countries that have extended and streamlined their canals. The Baltic–Volga waterway links the Lithuanian port of Klaipeda with Kahovka, at the mouth of the Dnieper on the Black Sea, a distance of 2,430 km/1,510 mi.
A further canal cuts across the north Crimea, thus shortening the voyage of ships from the Dnieper through the Black Sea to the Sea of Azov. In Central America, the Panama Canal 1904–14
links the Atlantic and Pacific oceans (64 km/40 mi). In North America, the Erie Canal 1825 linked the Great Lakes with the Hudson River and opened the northeast and Midwest commercially; the St Lawrence Seaway 1954–59 extends from Montréal to Lake Ontario (290 km/180 mi) and, with the deepening of the Welland Canal and some of the river channels, provides a waterway that enables ocean going vessels to travel (during the ice-free months) between the Atlantic and Duluth, Minnesota, US, at the western end of Lake Superior, some 3,770 km/2,342 mi.
Irrigation canals, dug from ancient times, provided flood control as well as neolithic farming villages with an expanded area of rich alluvial soil, especially in the Tigris-Euphrates valley and along the Nile, where agricultural surpluses eventually allowed for the rise of civilizations. Navigation canals developed after irrigation and drainage canals; often they link two waterways and were at first level and shallow. Soon, those with inclined planes had towpaths along which men and animals towed vessels from one level to the next. Locks were invented to allow passage where great variations in level exist. By the 20th century mechanized tows and self-propelled barges were in use.
1. Long and narrow strip of water made for boats or for irrigation.
2. (Astronomy) An indistinct surface feature of Mars once thought to be a system of channels; they are now believed to be an optical illusion.

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The only thing I did was, I made it possible for them to turn those blades so you could sail this thing in the canal, because I love sailing.
Source: TED2020
What if it is the equivalent, depending on where you are, of the Grand Canal, in terms of tourists, habitation, desalination, agriculture?
Source: TED2020
A canal flowed between two rows of houses.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: channel · duct · epithelial duct

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.

So I'm sitting here looking at the next two decades of my life, this chasm of happiness that we're driving our proverbial convertible straight into.
Source: TED2020
Therefore, day after day, you wind up walking in and out of a chasm of darkness.
Source: TED2020
So I live on both sides of this chasm.
Source: TED2020

culvert

nounIPA: / kʌlvərt /

ETYM Prob. from Old Fren. coulouere, French couloir, channel, gutter, gallery, from couler to flow. Related to Cullis.
A transverse and totally enclosed drain under a road or railway.
Drain; conduit.

gap

nounIPA: / ɡˈap /

ETYM Old Eng. gap; cf. Icel. gap an empty space, Swed. gap mouth, breach, abyss, Dan. gab mouth, opening, AS. geap expanse; as adj, wide, spacious. Related to Gape.r /> 1. A conspicuous disparity or difference as between two figures; SYN. spread.
2. A narrow opening; SYN. crack.

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You need to make that gap as big as possible, because there is this commonplace of the status quo, and you need to contrast that with the loftiness of your idea.
Source: TED2020
And that gap you see between the blue and red lines is pretty powerful.
Source: TED2020
We're advocates for the power early literacy has to reduce that achievement gap and eliminate the word gap.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: break · col · crack · disruption · interruption · opening · spread

precipice

nounIPA: / pʁesipˈis /

ETYM French précipice, Latin praecipitium, from praeceps, -cipitis, headlong; prae before + caput, capitis, the head. Related to Pre-, and Chief.
1. A very steep or overhanging place, a very steep cliff.
2. A hazardous situation; broadly; brink.

Peter Parker: ♪ Standing on the precipice, I can soar away from this. ♪ JT: We're trying to do everything in live theater that you can't do in two dimensions in film and television.
Source: TED2020
So what you see, that precipice, that high precipice with the valley, is the 2008 financial crisis.
Source: TED2020
The problem is when we're on a precipice, right?
Source: TED2020

rift

nounIPA: / ʁˈift /

ETYM Written also reft.
1. A gap between cloud masses.
2. A narrow fissure in rock.

From the gorgeous banks of the Nile, we glide into the beautiful Rift Valley of Kenya.
Source: TED2020
I met Agnes three years ago in the Rift Valley.
Source: TED2020
We started by setting up a hundred eye clinics across the Great Rift Valley, where we met people like Mama Jane and Theresa.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: breach · break · falling ou · rupture · severance

trough

nounIPA: / trɒf /

ETYM Old Eng. trough, trogh, as. trog, troh.
A narrow depression (as in the earth or between ocean waves or in the ocean bed).

They have a trough and a crest, and consist not of moving water, but the movement of energy through water.
Source: TED2020
The wavelength is the distance from crest to crest, or from trough to trough.
Source: Tatoeba
If the trough of a tsunami reaches shore first, the water will withdraw farther than normal before the wave hits, which can be misleadingly dangerous.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: bowl · gutter · manger · public treasury · till

jazavac

masculinezoologyIPA: / jazaʋats /
Translate 'jazavac' into
Words nearby

jadost · Jadran · Jadranska magistrala · jadranski · Jadransko More · jaz · jazavac · jazavci · jazavčar · jazbina · jak

English translation

badger

nounzoologyIPA: / badʒˈe /

Sturdy carnivorous burrowing mammal with strong claws widely distributed in the northern hemisphere.
Large mammal of the weasel family with molar teeth of a crushing type adapted to a partly vegetable diet, and short strong legs with long claws suitable for digging. The Eurasian common badger Meles meles is about 1 m/3 ft long, with long, coarse, grayish hair on the back, and a white face with a broad black stripe along each side. Mainly a woodland animal, it is harmless and nocturnal, and spends the day in a system of burrows called a
sett”. It feeds on roots, a variety of fruits and nuts, insects, worms, mice, and young rabbits.
The American badger Taxidea taxus is slightly smaller and lives in open country in North America. Various species of hog badger, ferret badger, and stink badger occur in S and E Asia, the last having the anal scent glands characteristic of the weasel family well developed.

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That's the badger!
Source: Tatoeba
Tom's as bald as a badger, but he had a full head of hair when he was young.
Source: Tatoeba
So if you think of the word "set," a set can be a badger's burrow, a set can be one of the pleats in an Elizabethan ruff, and there's one numbered definition in the OED.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: Badger · Wisconsinite

bauson

noun

bawson

noun

brock

nounIPA: / brɑːk /

Badger.

Now, when it comes to pain, psychologist Brock Bastian probably said it best when he wrote, "Pain is a kind of shortcut to mindfulness.
Source: TED2020

das

nounIPA: / dæs /
We've got Maria das Neves from São Tomé and Príncipe.
Source: TED2020
"Jedem das Seine", meaning "To each what he deserves", is a slogan placed over the entrance gate of the Buchenwald concentration camp during the Holocaust.
Source: Tatoeba
I live at 517, das Torres Street, Madrid, Spain.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: coney · cony · dassie · hyrax

jazavci

pluralIPA: / jazaʋtsi /
English translation

dassen

plural
The oil slick was now moving north towards Dassen Island, and the rescuers despaired, because they knew if the oil hit, it would not be possible to rescue any more oiled birds.
Source: TED2020
And exactly six years and three days earlier, on June 20, 1994, a ship named the Apollo Sea sank near Dassen Island, oiling 10,000 penguins, half of which died.
Source: TED2020
Now, the ship sank between Robben Island to the south, and Dassen Island to the north two of the penguins' main breeding islands.
Source: TED2020

jazavčar

masculinezoologyIPA: / jazaʋtʃar /
Translate 'jazavčar' into
English translation

dachshund

nounzoologyIPA: / dɑːkshʊnd /

ETYM German, from dachs badger + hund dog.
Small long-bodied short-legged German breed of dog having a short sleek coat and long drooping ears; suited for following game into burrows; SYN. dachsie, badger dog.
Small dog of German origin, bred originally for d
igging out badgers. It has a long body and short legs. Several varieties are bred: standard size (up to 10 kg/22 lb), miniature (5 kg/11 lb or less), long-haired, smooth-haired, and wire-haired.

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I'd like it to have the head of a Dachshund, the body of a retriever, maybe some pink fur, and let's make it glow in the dark"?
Source: TED2020
A dachshund is a dog from Germany with a very long body and short legs.
Source: Tatoeba
Dorgan didn't know how to spell dachshund.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: badger dog · dachsie

wiener dog

nounzoologyIPA: / ˈwiːnər ˈdɔːɡ /

jazbina

feminineIPA: / jazbina /
English translation

burrow

nounIPA: / bɝːoʊ /

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

This mode of listening ties in with our susceptibility to musical ear worms, where segments of music burrow into our head, and play again and again, as if stuck on repeat.
Source: TED2020
When they hear an opening, they burrow into the tree and skewer grubs with their needle-like middle finger.
Source: TED2020
The fox trail leads to a burrow.
Source: Tatoeba

Synonyms: tunnel

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.

This was a prison assignment which was one big den of criminals.
Source: TED2020
I was born in Den Bosch, where the painter Hieronymus Bosch named himself after.
Source: TED2020
Nine to eleven, every prisoner went into the education program the same den in which they thought they would put me behind the bar and things would be forgotten.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: hideaway · hideout · lair

gape

nounIPA: / ɡeɪp /

1. A stare of amazement (usually with the mouth open).
2. An expression of open-mouthed astonishment.

I can only gape at such perfection.
Source: Tatoeba

kennel

nounIPA: / kenl̩ /

A shelter for a dog; SYN. doghouse, dog house.

It took me five hours to make this kennel.
Source: Tatoeba
But funny story, actually, of being put into a dog kennel.
Source: TED2020
I love the way he sits and lies on his kennel and contemplates the great things of life.
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: dog house · doghouse

lair

nounIPA: / ler /

ETYM Old Eng. leir, AS. leger; akin to Dutch leger, German lager couch, lair, Old High Germ. legar, Goth. ligrs, and to Eng. lie. Related to Lie to be prostrate, and cf. Layer, Leaguer.
The habitation of wild animals; SYN. den.

The greatest challenge a vampire hunter can take on is to bring sunlight into a vampire's lair.
Source: TED2020
Where is the bandits' lair?
Source: Tatoeba
So in which corner should you place the diffuser to flood the vampire lair with sunlight?
Source: TED2020

Synonyms: den

nest

nounIPA: / nest /

ETYM as. nest.
1. A structure, usually made of twigs and mud, in which animals (especially birds) lay eggs or give birth to their young.
2. A gang of criminals asse
mbled in one place.
3. A cosy or secluded retreat.
4. A weapons emplacement; or.
5. Furniture pieces made to fit close together.

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And these four groups are just the ants outside the nest.
Source: TED2020
That's a wasps' nest.
Source: TED2020
So watch this individual here, and what he's trying to do is set up a nest.
Source: TED2020

Similar words to "jaz"

Ja! · ja · jaje · jak · jako · Jao! · jasika · jauk · jahač · jači · jašući · jež · ježić · jeza · jezik · jezici · jezičak · jezički · Jezus · jek · jeka · jeha · jo-jo · joga · jogi · joha · još · još i · jug · juha · Juhu!
Translation may not be correct. Examples are from unreviewed external source.