英:[ˈdrʌmlɪn]
美:[ˈdrʌmlɪn]
英:[ˈdrʌmlɪn]
美:[ˈdrʌmlɪn]
drum·lin
druhm lihn
"冰河时期冰川运动形成的沙、砾石和巨石的长而狭窄的山脊或山丘",1833年,是早期 drum(1725年)的缩小版,通常分隔两个平行的山谷,来自盖尔语和爱尔兰语 druim "背部,山脊"。与 esker 有些相似,但起源不同(可能),它们的确切性质还不太清楚。
鼓丘
Irish druim back, ridge (from Old Irish druimm) + English -lin (alteration of -ling)
The first known use of drumlin was in 1812
drunkenadjective
drunk entry 2 sense 1
having a habit of drinking too much alcohol
resulting from being drunk
a drunken brawl
drunk entry 2 sense 3b
drunkardnoun
a person who makes a habit of getting drunk
drunk1 of 3
drumsticknoun
a stick for beating a drum
the lower part of a fowl's leg
drumsticknoun
a stick for beating a drum
the lower part of a fowl's leg
drum1 of 2noun
a musical percussion instrument consisting of a hollow cylinder with a thin layer of material (as animal skin or plastic) stretched over one or both ends that is beaten with a stick or with the hands
the sound of a drumalso: a similar sound
a drum-shaped object: as
a cylindrical mechanical device or part
a cylindrical container
oil drums
a disk-shaped ammunition container that may be attached to a firearm
drum2 of 2verb
to beat or play on or as if on a drum
to sound rhythmically : throb, beat
to call or gather together by or as if by beating a drum
drum up business
to dismiss in shame : expel
drummed out of the army
to drive or force by steady effort or repetition
drummed the lesson into their heads
to strike or tap repeatedly so as to produce rhythmic sounds
drummed the table with his fingers
drum1 of 2noun
a musical percussion instrument consisting of a hollow cylinder with a thin layer of material (as animal skin or plastic) stretched over one or both ends that is beaten with a stick or with the hands
the sound of a drumalso: a similar sound
a drum-shaped object: as
a cylindrical mechanical device or part
a cylindrical container
oil drums
a disk-shaped ammunition container that may be attached to a firearm
drum2 of 2verb
to beat or play on or as if on a drum
to sound rhythmically : throb, beat
to call or gather together by or as if by beating a drum
drum up business
to dismiss in shame : expel
drummed out of the army
to drive or force by steady effort or repetition
drummed the lesson into their heads
to strike or tap repeatedly so as to produce rhythmic sounds
drummed the table with his fingers
drummernoun
one that plays a drum
traveling salesman
drum1 of 2noun
a musical percussion instrument consisting of a hollow cylinder with a thin layer of material (as animal skin or plastic) stretched over one or both ends that is beaten with a stick or with the hands
the sound of a drumalso: a similar sound
a drum-shaped object: as
a cylindrical mechanical device or part
a cylindrical container
oil drums
a disk-shaped ammunition container that may be attached to a firearm
drum2 of 2verb
to beat or play on or as if on a drum
to sound rhythmically : throb, beat
to call or gather together by or as if by beating a drum
drum up business
to dismiss in shame : expel
drummed out of the army
to drive or force by steady effort or repetition
drummed the lesson into their heads
to strike or tap repeatedly so as to produce rhythmic sounds
drummed the table with his fingers
drumlinnoun
a long or oval hill of material left by a glacier
1 For example, a drumlin is an elongated feature that is streamlined at the down-ice end.
2 Behind the terminal moraines lie wide till plains, in places studded thickly with drumlins, or ridged with an occasional esker.
3 I know the swell of that clavicle, the drumlin of bone, which now juts strangely, broken for sure.
4 Another type of hillocky deposit is exemplified by the “drums” or “drumlins.”
5 It comes from the experience of and connection to the place where I live. The glacial-formed 'drumlin' landscape and the rocky shoreline, where the land meets the sea.
这一灵感来源于我的经历以及我所居住的地方——冰块结构的冰丘景观与岩石海岸线(在此地面与海水相接)。
6 To him, they looked like drumlins, sedimentary castles that dot parts of his native Northern Ireland.
7 Among the numerous drumlins about Boston is historic Bunker Hill.
8 Architect Paul Albanese took full advantage of this feature—by the end of the round, golfers have intersected the drumlin 10 times in different ways.
9 I spent the mornings at my chores, one eye on the sea, and then, from the top of a drumlin, spent some time looking north, my old spyglass ready.
10 Disconnection, one senses, is a not-unfamiliar state for DBC Pierre, whose nomadic lifestyle has led him to this rural Irish hinterland of drumlins, lakes and parochial towns close to the border with Northern Ireland.
11 They may sound like adorable forest imps, or perhaps a tedious improvisation troupe, but drumlins are actually elongated hills.
12 At the very back of his lot his garden pitches upward — as the property was a glacial drumlin.
13 The sea of centuries has beaten against the great drumlins of boulder-till and has not moved the boulders that bind them together.
14 When it began to melt and retreat, it was the chief agent in building up our river terraces, and our long, low, rounded hills of sand and gravel and clay, called kames and drumlins.
15 It’s a long way from Tipperary, and Ulster fries are hard to come by, but those lovely drumlins are well worth the trip.
16 Ideas informed by the glacial drumlin landscape where I live are combined with those gleaned from explorations of the eroded rock surfaces of local beaches.
我将我所居住的冰川地带使我产生的想法与探索当地海滩的风化岩石表面所产生的想法相融合。
17 Moraines and gentle drumlins rose and fell along the riverside, creating miniature highlands shrouded in red oak and sugar maple.
18 The bay below is scattered with islands - called drumlins - left over from the last Ice Age.
19 If you're wanting a bit of a challenge and aren't on wheels, you can choose one of the trails that goes to the top of the drumlin.
20 They said the evidence of ice age activity included several glacial features being found, including elongated rounded mounds or drumlins.
1 椭圆形冰丘