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vestiges    音标拼音: [v'ɛstɪdʒɪz]
n. 陈迹

陈迹


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  • Is there a difference between rock and stone? - Earth Science Stack . . .
    Once clarified then the difference between a rock and a stone can be possibly be clarified So to answer the question above - yes there is a difference - a rock is an object and stone is a substance
  • nouns - Whats the difference between rock and stone? - English . . .
    Stone tends to be the human altered (cut or treated) substance or building material - rock is the material in a natural context more often eg: "Rock strata" in mineralogy and hydrology, but dressed stone building (rather than hewn rock or cut rock building) Interesting patterns of use
  • Whats the diference between claystone, silt, mud, mudstone, mudrock . . .
    Here in Perú , we call those rocks: Shale = Lutita Siltstone = Limonita But as far as I know we don't use the terms claystone and mudstone in Spanish terms
  • word choice - What are the differences between crack, slit . . .
    I was wondering what differences are between the words crack, slit, crevice, split, cleft, and possibly other similar words, and when to use which? For example, I just bought a bowl and there is a
  • What are the differences between alluvial, eluvial and colluvial . . .
    Your question is almost a duplicate of What is the difference between eluvium and alluvium?, but you also ask about colluvial deposits The accepted answer for that question references this convenient guide from the Australian Museum, which also covers colluvial deposits: Alluvial: Detrital material which is transported by a river and usually deposited along the river's pathway, either in the
  • expression caught between a rock and a hard place
    Have you considered its potential origin in Homer's Odyssey, given its parallel with the expression between Scylla and Charybdis? Scylla was a rock shoal (the "rock") and Charybdis a whirlpool (the "hard place") in the Strait of Messina, the two being represented as sea-monsters in Greek myth
  • Throw you with a stone vs Throw a stone at you
    The difference is in the meaning implied by with With: 1 Accompanied by (another person or thing) Ex: a nice steak with a bottle of red wine 2 Indicating the instrument used to perform an action: Ex: cut the fish with a knife When you say, I will throw you with a stone, the implication is throwing someone along with a stone (refer the first definition) On the other hand, when you say, I will
  • Whats the difference between cleavage and fracture?
    Fracture is when the break does not form along the crystallographic directions It then can be grainy or conchoidal (like breaking glass) Fracture is also used to describe the breaking of rocks as opposed to single crystals In this case planar fracture follows the direction of forces that formed the rock
  • What is the difference between a ravine, gorge and canyon?
    What is the difference between a gorge and a ravine? And how does canyon fit in? My impression was that there was an implied scale, where a ravine is smaller than a gorge, which is smaller than a canyon All of these geographical features seem to be created in the same way: a river or stream eroding hard rocky material, giving steep sides
  • What is the difference between a quay and a wharf?
    A "quay" is "a long structure, usually built of stone, where boats can be tied up to take on and off their goods," says the same dictionary Does size matter here? I mean, ships for wharves, and boats for quays? Because, apart from that, I can see no real difference





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