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inundation

/in-uhn-dey-shuhn, -uhn-/US // ˌɪn ənˈdeɪ ʃən, -ʌn- //

淹没,淹水,洪水,洪涝

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the condition of being flooded:Researchers are warning that accelerated sea level change threatens hundreds of thousands of coastal homes with inundation.
    • : a flood: Areas shaded in purple on the map may see an inundation of 3 to 12 feet.
    • : the condition or state of being overwhelmed:Angkor Wat, the magnificent temple of the Khmer Empire, faces inundation by tourists and environmental dangers.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The imagery shows the massive amount of storm surge inundation as the marshland was overrun by ocean water.

  • It’s becoming clear, they say, that Ida’s danger extends well beyond the inundation and scattered debris caused by the Category 4 hurricane — since downgraded to a tropical storm washing over parts of Alabama, Tennessee and Kentucky.

  • Across the globe, innumerable cultural sites face storm-related flooding, erosion and inundation from rising seas.

  • Ways of adaptingAcross the globe, innumerable cultural sites face storm-related flooding, erosion and inundation from rising seas.

  • With just over 234 million eligible voters, most Americans have received a handful, and those in swing states or in pivotal voting groups are getting clobbered with a total inundation.

  • Fertile fields, numerous villas and flourishing villages were overwhelmed by the inundation.

  • At one inundation that occurred about sixty years ago, eighty thousand persons were drowned.

  • The above is what has been said on the subject of winds and rains, the rising of rivers, and the inundation of plains.

  • Neither as yet was visible the threatening mass of the inundation.

  • He therefore bent all the energies of his mind and all the resources of his kingdom to arrest these fresh waves of inundation.