wadi

Example Sentences

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Recent Examples of wadi New geophysical surveys and coring of the wadi would shed more light on the hydrological aspects of the area, while other surveys might reveal where the eastward tunnels of the pyramid lead. Jennifer Ouellette, Ars Technica, 5 Aug. 2024 The building was built in a wadi. CBS News, 14 Dec. 2022 The wadi stretched outside the window. Ruth Margalit, The New Yorker, 25 Oct. 2021 The fresh air, the space while clambering over rocks in a wadi, or valley, and the austere style of the Bear Grylls camp appears for now to offer the opposite of that. Jon Gambrell, Star Tribune, 9 Oct. 2020 Another of Bogaczewicz’s photographs captures a Saudi family having a picnic under a highway overpass, much as their bedouin ancestors might have stopped their caravansary by a desert wadi to have a meal. Wired, 26 Nov. 2019 Laughter of couples crossing the lawn, sinking into the darkness of the wadi. Amos Oz, Harper's magazine, 10 Apr. 2019 But in the late 1800s, the Ottoman Empire began a new settlement at Jerash, mostly on the eastern bank of the wadi, on top of the ancient remains of that half of the city. Kiona N. Smith, Ars Technica, 30 May 2018 The spring that filled the Birketein reservoir, where modern residents swim, would have supplied about a quarter of the ancient city, along with water from upstream in the wadi. Kiona N. Smith, Ars Technica, 30 May 2018
Recent Examples of Synonyms for wadi
Noun
  • Her seawall drops about 7 feet into a mucky gully where freshwater once flowed from a manmade reservoir known as Wixom Lake.
    Kristen Jordan Shamus, Detroit Free Press, 22 Sep. 2024
  • The responders learned that a party of four climbers from Renton, which is a suburb of Seattle, were involved in a fall while descending a steep gully, the Okanogan County Sheriff’s Office said.
    Greg Wehner, FOXNews.com, 13 May 2025
Noun
  • And while our street was close enough to the national forest that bears and bobcats were not uncommon sights, it was also separated from it by a dry arroyo and five blocks of houses in between.
    Josh Eells, Rolling Stone, 13 Feb. 2025
  • Following last year’s Bridge fire, which scorched habitat in the East Fork of the San Gabriel River, 503 rainbows — in addition to Santa Ana speckled dace, Santa Ana sucker and arroyo chub — were relocated to nearby streams, Evans said.
    Lila Seidman, Los Angeles Times, 14 Jan. 2025
Noun
  • Bieber has proven time and time again that a floor-dusting trench goes with everything—including jorts and fisherman sandals.
    Hannah Jackson, Vogue, 20 May 2025
  • Most of the active coronae were encircled by trenches, a hint that old crust dives into Venus’s mantle around these rocky rings, where it is driven downward as buoyant rock rises from below in the middle of each corona’s ring structure.
    Elise Cutts, Scientific American, 13 May 2025
Noun
  • For a time from the late 1880s, Redondo Beach, with its steep, deep offshore canyon, did a brisk trade as a port for lumber to build L.A.
    Patt Morrison, Los Angeles Times, 24 May 2025
  • If your summer vacation plans include exploring sandstone canyons, watching wildlife or gawking at geothermal wonders, this may not be the year to do so at a national park.
    Ruffin Prevost, New York Times, 21 May 2025
Noun
  • Unlike most of the relatively flat Dakota prairie, the Missouri breaks that make up much of Sutton Bay’s landscape create an assortment of coulees with cattail bottoms, perfect lairs to hide the shifty late-season pheasants.
    Chris Dorsey, Forbes, 9 Dec. 2024
  • Guiding me into the highlands for red deer, a 300-pound ungulate that lives above timberline amid the picturesque heather, is John Caithness, an affable fifty-something veteran stalker who knows the many hidden coulees and pastures of the estate where stags tend to frequent.
    Chris Dorsey, Forbes, 23 Sep. 2024
Noun
  • The cyclist was helped from the ravine and emergency services transported him on a stretcher to the hospital.
    Natasha Dye, People.com, 27 May 2025
  • When camping in an open environment, select a campsite in a valley, ravine, or low region.
    STAR-TELEGRAM WEATHER BOT, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 26 May 2025
Noun
  • Some of the most photogenic stops include Cathedral Falls, a roadside cascade 20 minutes from Fayetteville that spills like a silver ribbon into a mossy gorge; and Valley Falls, a local favorite south of Fairmont with broad rocky ledges ideal for picnicking or dipping your toes.
    West Virginia Tourism, AFAR Media, 9 May 2025
  • The gifted pair play snipers on either side of a gorge that holds, well, something terrifying.
    Brian Tallerico, Vulture, 5 May 2025
Noun
  • Until a few years ago, much of the city’s sewage was released untreated into the Ganges via public drains, or nullahs, which discharged along the same bank as the ghats, where people habitually bathe.
    Oliver Franklin-Wallis, WIRED, 30 Nov. 2023
  • The project involves the diversion of a nullah which is a lifeline for the area.
    Manish Chandra Mishra, Quartz, 10 June 2021

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Cite this Entry

“Wadi.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/wadi. Accessed 6 Jun. 2025.

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