alorren hondatze |
field damage (A decline in the productivity of an area of land or in its ability to support natural ecosystems or types of agriculture. Degradation may be caused by a variety of factors, including inappropriate land management techniques, soil erosion, salinity, flooding, clearing, pests, pollution, climatic factors, or progressive urbanization) |
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altitude |
altitude (1. In general, a term used to describe a topographic eminence. 2. A specific altitude or height above a given level. 3. In surveying, the term refers to the angle between the horizontal and a point at a higher level) |
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altitude gutxiko hegaldi |
low-level flight (Flying at low altitude) |
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alturako arrantza |
deep sea fishing (Fishing in the deepest parts of the sea) |
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alturako arrantza |
open sea fishing (Fishing in the deepest parts of the sea) |
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altxatze |
rising (The slow vertical instability of the earth crust involving up-and-down movements as in the volcanic district west of Naples, Italy; geological) |
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altzairu |
steel (Any of various alloys based on iron containing carbon (usually 0.1-0.7 per cent) and often small quantities of other elements such as phosphorus, sulphur, manganese, chromium, and nickel. Steels exhibit a variety of properties, such as strength, machinability, malleability, etc., depending on their composition and the way they have been treated) |
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altzairuaren industria |
steel industry (Industry that deals with the processing of iron) |
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altzairugintza |
steel industry (Industry that deals with the processing of iron) |
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altzari |
furniture (The movable articles in a room or an establishment that make it fit for living or working) |
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altzari-industria |
furniture industry (No definition needed) |
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alubioi |
alluvion (An overflowing; an inundation or flood, especially when the water is charged with much suspended material) |
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alubioi-lautada |
alluvial plain (A level or gently sloping tract or a slightly undulating land surface produced by extensive deposition of alluvium, usually adjacent to a river that periodically overflows its banks; it may be situated on a flood plain, a delta, or an alluvial fan) |
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alumina |
alumina (A natural or synthetic oxide of aluminum widely distributed in nature, often found as a constituent part of clays, feldspars, micas and other minerals, and as a major component of bauxite) |
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aluminio |
aluminium (A light white metal, ductile and malleable, and a good conductor of electricity. It occurs widely in nature in clays and is the third most abundant element in the Earth's crust. It is extracted mainly from bauxite by electrolysis of a molten mixture of purified bauxite and cryolite. The metal and its alloys are used for aircraft, cooking utensils, electrical apparatus, and for many other purposes where its light weight is an advantage. Aluminium became implicated as an environmental health hazard in the 1980s on two counts. Biomedical scientists looking for possible causes of Alzheimer's disease, the premature senility indicated by loss of memory and confusion, found a circumstantial link with aluminium. The theory is a controversial one, Al) |
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aluminio-eduki |
aluminium content (Amount of aluminium contained in a solution) |
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aluminio-industria |
aluminium industry (A sector of the economy in which an aggregate of commercial enterprises is engaged in the mining and processing of aluminum) |
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aluminiozko ontzi |
aluminium container (A can or box made of aluminium in which material is held or carried) |
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ama-esne |
breast milk (Milk from the breast for feeding babies) |
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amalgama |
amalgam (A solution of a metal in mercury) |
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