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单词 tarn
释义

tarn1

noun tɑːntɑrn
  • A small mountain lake.

    in place names Malham Tarn
    Example sentencesExamples
    • The sacred lake didn't look any different from a thousand other inhospitable high-altitude tarns found everywhere in Tibet.
    • Coots, ducks and flamingos clustered around the fringes of shallow tarns whilst great flocks of upland geese, buff-necked ibis and lapwing settled on the plains to feed.
    • Carry on across a hollow containing two tarns named Kirkfell Tarn to the North Top of Kirk Fell.
    • With the arrival of Easter holidays and potentially warm spring sunshine, people should not be lulled into thinking the lakes and tarns are warming up, said the Lake District National Park Authority rangers.
    • All around it is limestone, which anyone who has studied geography at school will know is pervious and water disappears through it, the area of the tarn lays on Silurian Slate, hence the reason for this magnificent sheet of water.
    • From the top of the ridge you can see a number of mountain tarns and look down into the Wairau Valley on the other side.
    • In Cumbria we have a total of between 20 and 22 lakes and tarns.
    • The lake is the deepest among all tarns and lakes of Kashmir.
    • There are lime rich waters, acidic tarns with all ranges in between and the Shetland Anglers Association work extremely hard to maintain the trout lochs as a top class fishing venue.
    • Below your feet a rosary of mountain tarns drop down towards Rhichonich and beyond them Cambrian quartzite slopes rise to the long ridge of what is probably the finest mountain in this empty quarter of Sutherland - Foinaven.
    • You will enjoy dramatic views of waterfalls, valleys, tarns and rugged rock formations.
    • The region is packed with hundreds of bodies of water, relics of the last ice age, 10,000 years ago, but most are deemed too small to be called lakes, and are referred to locally in the old Norse word, tarns.
    • I loved the flattish grassy terrain at the top with numerous tarns of slate-grey water fringed with tussock and rocks.
    • The climb continues easy and steady on track in a small, closed-in valley, so there is only close-quarter interest: another bridge, a waterfall, lesser ruins, then a pretty tarn.
    • A classic glacial relic, the tarn lies in a trough that was cut by ice moving across from Great to Little Langdale.
    • Walkers to the Lake District often concentrate on conquering the most challenging peaks and fells, forgetting about the region's 16 lakes and 400 tranquil tarns, streams and waterfalls.
    • A bridge crosses the point where a small beck that catches water from Iron Keld and Black Crag brings the main supply of water to the tarn.
    • A spectacular six-foot dragonfly will also be installed on one of the tarns in the forest just another addition to the 90 permanent sculptures on show every year.
    • Soon after you leave the shelter of the trees you come to a mountain tarn.
    • After passing the Dollar Lakes, I hear the gurgle of a stream and then see Lamoille Lake, a shallow mountain tarn in a glacial bowl, with steep talus slopes cradling it.

Origin

Middle English (originally northern English dialect): from Old Norse tjǫrn.

Rhymes

Abadan, Abidjan, adhan, Amman, Antoine, Arne, Aswan, Avon, Azerbaijan, Baltistan, Baluchistan, Bantustan, barn, Bhutan, Dagestan, darn, dewan, Farne, guan, Hahn, Hanuman, Hindustan, Huascarán, Iban, Iran, Isfahan, Juan, Kazakhstan, khan, Koran, Kurdistan, Kurgan, Kyrgyzstan, macédoine, Mahon, maidan, Marne, Michoacán, Oman, Pakistan, pan, Pathan, Qumran, Rajasthan, Shan, Siân, Sichuan, skarn, soutane, Sudan, Tai'an, t'ai chi ch'uan, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Taklimakan, Tatarstan, Tehran, Tenochtitlán, Turkestan, Turkmenistan, tzigane, Uzbekistan, Vientiane, yarn, Yinchuan, yuan, Yucatán

Tarn2

proper nountɑːntaʀntärn
  • A river of southern France, which rises in the Cévennes and flows 380 km (235 miles) generally south-westwards through deep gorges before meeting the River Garonne north-west of Toulouse.

 
 

tarn1

nountärntɑrn
  • A small mountain lake.

    in place names Malham Tarn
    Example sentencesExamples
    • With the arrival of Easter holidays and potentially warm spring sunshine, people should not be lulled into thinking the lakes and tarns are warming up, said the Lake District National Park Authority rangers.
    • After passing the Dollar Lakes, I hear the gurgle of a stream and then see Lamoille Lake, a shallow mountain tarn in a glacial bowl, with steep talus slopes cradling it.
    • Below your feet a rosary of mountain tarns drop down towards Rhichonich and beyond them Cambrian quartzite slopes rise to the long ridge of what is probably the finest mountain in this empty quarter of Sutherland - Foinaven.
    • In Cumbria we have a total of between 20 and 22 lakes and tarns.
    • Soon after you leave the shelter of the trees you come to a mountain tarn.
    • The lake is the deepest among all tarns and lakes of Kashmir.
    • Coots, ducks and flamingos clustered around the fringes of shallow tarns whilst great flocks of upland geese, buff-necked ibis and lapwing settled on the plains to feed.
    • The region is packed with hundreds of bodies of water, relics of the last ice age, 10,000 years ago, but most are deemed too small to be called lakes, and are referred to locally in the old Norse word, tarns.
    • The climb continues easy and steady on track in a small, closed-in valley, so there is only close-quarter interest: another bridge, a waterfall, lesser ruins, then a pretty tarn.
    • Carry on across a hollow containing two tarns named Kirkfell Tarn to the North Top of Kirk Fell.
    • I loved the flattish grassy terrain at the top with numerous tarns of slate-grey water fringed with tussock and rocks.
    • Walkers to the Lake District often concentrate on conquering the most challenging peaks and fells, forgetting about the region's 16 lakes and 400 tranquil tarns, streams and waterfalls.
    • A spectacular six-foot dragonfly will also be installed on one of the tarns in the forest just another addition to the 90 permanent sculptures on show every year.
    • All around it is limestone, which anyone who has studied geography at school will know is pervious and water disappears through it, the area of the tarn lays on Silurian Slate, hence the reason for this magnificent sheet of water.
    • There are lime rich waters, acidic tarns with all ranges in between and the Shetland Anglers Association work extremely hard to maintain the trout lochs as a top class fishing venue.
    • You will enjoy dramatic views of waterfalls, valleys, tarns and rugged rock formations.
    • A classic glacial relic, the tarn lies in a trough that was cut by ice moving across from Great to Little Langdale.
    • From the top of the ridge you can see a number of mountain tarns and look down into the Wairau Valley on the other side.
    • A bridge crosses the point where a small beck that catches water from Iron Keld and Black Crag brings the main supply of water to the tarn.
    • The sacred lake didn't look any different from a thousand other inhospitable high-altitude tarns found everywhere in Tibet.

Origin

Middle English (originally northern English dialect): from Old Norse tjǫrn.

Tarn2

proper nountärn
  • A river in southern France that rises in the Cévennes and flows 235 miles (380 km) southwest through deep gorges before meeting the Garonne River northwest of Toulouse.

 
 
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更新时间:2024/12/24 1:18:57