释义 |
Definition of landlocked in English: landlockedadjective ˈlandlɒktˈlæn(d)ˌlɑkt 1(of a country or region) almost or entirely surrounded by land. I was raised in landlocked Winnipeg Example sentencesExamples - The lack of natural resources and the geographical situation as a landlocked country with a small domestic market, even in the early ages of industrialization, forced the country to look for markets abroad for its goods and services.
- Zambia's economic survival as a landlocked country depends on the transport system for the movement of its exports and imports.
- Relatively inaccessible, the mountainous country is landlocked, and is surrounded by countries whose interests, at times, have conflicted with those of Afghanistan.
- The Republic of Moldova is a landlocked country between Romania and Ukraine that covers 13,199 square miles (33,845 square kilometers).
- Zambia is a landlocked country with a total of 752,614 square kilometres surrounded by eight different neighbouring states.
- It had been noted by agriculture experts that Zambia being a landlocked country has high cost of importation that makes landed price of fertiliser abnormally high.
- The key to the huge potential profits in Central Asia was distribution - how to transport the oil and gas from this isolated, backward and landlocked region to the world's main energy markets.
- A mountainous landlocked country located in south-central Europe, Austria encompasses an area of 32,377 square miles, roughly the size of the state of Maine.
- Because Afghanistan is a landlocked nation with mountainous terrain and a deteriorated road network, it was apparent that time-sensitive support bad to be transported by air.
- Uzbekistan is, apart from Liechtenstein, the only double landlocked country in the world (i.e. a country surrounded by landlocked countries).
- Part of that is due to the fact that Umbria is the only landlocked region on the Italian peninsula.
- The problem, put simply, is geography: the landlocked country is dominated by the rugged Hindu Kush mountains that sweep from the west to the east.
- The Republic of Burundi is a landlocked country located in the Great Lakes region in Africa.
- Bolivia, the only landlocked country in the Western Hemisphere, is home to almost eight million people.
- Bhutan is a small, landlocked country in the mountainous area north of India.
- The Corridor is a Southern African Development Community initiative that aims at linking the landlocked countries in the region to the main Namibian sea port of Walvisbay.
- As a landlocked country with primarily a desert terrain, it has until recently depended on rain as its main water source.
- Our politicians should be thankful that Australia is not a landlocked country, where neighbouring conflict would have the potential to drive hundreds of thousands of refugees across borders.
- An estimated 100,000 militiamen are operating around the landlocked country under the command of regional warlords.
- Certainly in the case of Zambia, a landlocked country with poor transportation and low agricultural productivity, the prospects for exporting corn to Europe in the foreseeable future are almost zero.
- 1.1 (of a lake or harbour) enclosed by land and having no navigable route to the sea.
a chain of landlocked lagoons Example sentencesExamples - The landlocked lagoon at the foot of the dunes at Sandwich Harbour was once the only reliable source of fresh water on the coast between Angola to the north and the Orange River in the south.
- There is also a population of the sharks in Lake Nicaragua, which because of its great distance from the ocean was once thought to be landlocked.
- The migratory instinct is so strong that some adults will writhe overland for up to 24 hours between landlocked ponds and sea-bound rivers to reach the ocean.
- There are sixty-one natural harbours, several landlocked straits, and hundreds of rivers, bays, and lakes.
- As far back as 1671, the almost landlocked harbour was recognised as a hurricane haven for ships, which could lie protected in the basin formed within an old volcanic cone, with one narrow passage to the sea.
- Legend tells of a beautiful girl who lived in a village on the Wild Coast near a great landlocked lagoon.
- The sophisticated capital, Argostoli, set on a deep landlocked inlet, is a busy place where Andrew and Julia can do some shopping and choose from a variety of restaurants.
- The Salton Sea, a landlocked mass of salt water in the southern Californian desert, was created in 1905 when torrential rainfalls swelled the banks of the Colorado River until it flooded the Imperial Valley.
- If by that reference they mean totally and literally landlocked water, then we take issue with that.
- Scientists are providing coral pieces containing starter plants to farmers on Molokai, who hope to grow it in landlocked ponds.
- We got a glimpse of another lake on the right, Lake Gertrude, which unlike Lake Dora, is landlocked.
- This is a landlocked salt-water lake that was cut off when the surrounding reef rose up in prehistoric times.
- We say that landlocked lakes, for example, completely landlocked lakes, would not qualify.
- Portuguese navigators were about to shatter Ptolemy's world picture, with its portrayal of a landlocked Indian Ocean, and their king wanted the world to know.
- That famous landlocked harbour is surrounded by rock so soft that streams don't cut V-shaped grooves but Y-shaped chasms that suck in unwary ramblers and climbers, this not two hours from the city.
- 1.2 (of a fish, especially a North American salmon) cut off from the sea in the past and now confined to fresh water.
Maine's landlocked sebago salmon Example sentencesExamples - Another landlocked salmon is the E. American sebago salmon, found in Sebago and other lakes and their associated rivers.
- The building of dams along the rivers has impacted the populations of white sturgeons by creating landlocked populations and destroying spawning grounds.
- The maximum size of the landlocked variety appears to be about 762 mm although most individuals are somewhat smaller.
- It has been introduced into upland areas (including the upper Great Lakes) where some populations are landlocked.
- Though some striped bass can spawn in fresh water and make their homes in salt water, there are many ‘stripers’ which remain landlocked.
- He also broke the landlocked salmon story in 1995, tracing the cause of their near-extinction to the planting of apple trees and over-intensive farming.
- Twenty of these lakes contained rainbow smelt, while 10 lakes had both landlocked salmon and rainbow smelt.
- Kokanee salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka kennerlyi) are a landlocked subspecies of sockeye salmon (O. nerka nerka).
- Some populations of Menidia beryllina are estuarine, while others are landlocked in fresh water.
- Thus, consistently more alleles were found within the anadromous than within the landlocked populations from Maine.
- There indeed was an endangered salmon in Taiwan - Oncorhynchus masou formosanus - the Taiwanese landlocked masu salmon.
- This shift in diet for larger perch was also observed in landlocked populations.
- Sea-run Atlantic salmon usually attain a larger size than do landlocked (those living in entirely fresh water) salmon.
Definition of landlocked in US English: landlockedadjectiveˈlan(d)ˌläktˈlæn(d)ˌlɑkt 1(especially of a country) almost or entirely surrounded by land; having no coastline or seaport. a midget state landlocked in the mountains Example sentencesExamples - It had been noted by agriculture experts that Zambia being a landlocked country has high cost of importation that makes landed price of fertiliser abnormally high.
- The lack of natural resources and the geographical situation as a landlocked country with a small domestic market, even in the early ages of industrialization, forced the country to look for markets abroad for its goods and services.
- The Republic of Burundi is a landlocked country located in the Great Lakes region in Africa.
- Relatively inaccessible, the mountainous country is landlocked, and is surrounded by countries whose interests, at times, have conflicted with those of Afghanistan.
- The problem, put simply, is geography: the landlocked country is dominated by the rugged Hindu Kush mountains that sweep from the west to the east.
- Zambia is a landlocked country with a total of 752,614 square kilometres surrounded by eight different neighbouring states.
- Because Afghanistan is a landlocked nation with mountainous terrain and a deteriorated road network, it was apparent that time-sensitive support bad to be transported by air.
- An estimated 100,000 militiamen are operating around the landlocked country under the command of regional warlords.
- Our politicians should be thankful that Australia is not a landlocked country, where neighbouring conflict would have the potential to drive hundreds of thousands of refugees across borders.
- The key to the huge potential profits in Central Asia was distribution - how to transport the oil and gas from this isolated, backward and landlocked region to the world's main energy markets.
- Bolivia, the only landlocked country in the Western Hemisphere, is home to almost eight million people.
- Uzbekistan is, apart from Liechtenstein, the only double landlocked country in the world (i.e. a country surrounded by landlocked countries).
- Certainly in the case of Zambia, a landlocked country with poor transportation and low agricultural productivity, the prospects for exporting corn to Europe in the foreseeable future are almost zero.
- Zambia's economic survival as a landlocked country depends on the transport system for the movement of its exports and imports.
- The Republic of Moldova is a landlocked country between Romania and Ukraine that covers 13,199 square miles (33,845 square kilometers).
- As a landlocked country with primarily a desert terrain, it has until recently depended on rain as its main water source.
- Part of that is due to the fact that Umbria is the only landlocked region on the Italian peninsula.
- The Corridor is a Southern African Development Community initiative that aims at linking the landlocked countries in the region to the main Namibian sea port of Walvisbay.
- A mountainous landlocked country located in south-central Europe, Austria encompasses an area of 32,377 square miles, roughly the size of the state of Maine.
- Bhutan is a small, landlocked country in the mountainous area north of India.
- 1.1 (of a lake) enclosed by land and having no navigable route to the sea.
Example sentencesExamples - The landlocked lagoon at the foot of the dunes at Sandwich Harbour was once the only reliable source of fresh water on the coast between Angola to the north and the Orange River in the south.
- Portuguese navigators were about to shatter Ptolemy's world picture, with its portrayal of a landlocked Indian Ocean, and their king wanted the world to know.
- Legend tells of a beautiful girl who lived in a village on the Wild Coast near a great landlocked lagoon.
- That famous landlocked harbour is surrounded by rock so soft that streams don't cut V-shaped grooves but Y-shaped chasms that suck in unwary ramblers and climbers, this not two hours from the city.
- The Salton Sea, a landlocked mass of salt water in the southern Californian desert, was created in 1905 when torrential rainfalls swelled the banks of the Colorado River until it flooded the Imperial Valley.
- The migratory instinct is so strong that some adults will writhe overland for up to 24 hours between landlocked ponds and sea-bound rivers to reach the ocean.
- We say that landlocked lakes, for example, completely landlocked lakes, would not qualify.
- This is a landlocked salt-water lake that was cut off when the surrounding reef rose up in prehistoric times.
- As far back as 1671, the almost landlocked harbour was recognised as a hurricane haven for ships, which could lie protected in the basin formed within an old volcanic cone, with one narrow passage to the sea.
- If by that reference they mean totally and literally landlocked water, then we take issue with that.
- There are sixty-one natural harbours, several landlocked straits, and hundreds of rivers, bays, and lakes.
- We got a glimpse of another lake on the right, Lake Gertrude, which unlike Lake Dora, is landlocked.
- Scientists are providing coral pieces containing starter plants to farmers on Molokai, who hope to grow it in landlocked ponds.
- There is also a population of the sharks in Lake Nicaragua, which because of its great distance from the ocean was once thought to be landlocked.
- The sophisticated capital, Argostoli, set on a deep landlocked inlet, is a busy place where Andrew and Julia can do some shopping and choose from a variety of restaurants.
- 1.2 (of a fish, especially a North American salmon) cut off from the sea in the past and now confined to fresh water.
Example sentencesExamples - He also broke the landlocked salmon story in 1995, tracing the cause of their near-extinction to the planting of apple trees and over-intensive farming.
- It has been introduced into upland areas (including the upper Great Lakes) where some populations are landlocked.
- Thus, consistently more alleles were found within the anadromous than within the landlocked populations from Maine.
- There indeed was an endangered salmon in Taiwan - Oncorhynchus masou formosanus - the Taiwanese landlocked masu salmon.
- This shift in diet for larger perch was also observed in landlocked populations.
- Some populations of Menidia beryllina are estuarine, while others are landlocked in fresh water.
- Kokanee salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka kennerlyi) are a landlocked subspecies of sockeye salmon (O. nerka nerka).
- Twenty of these lakes contained rainbow smelt, while 10 lakes had both landlocked salmon and rainbow smelt.
- Sea-run Atlantic salmon usually attain a larger size than do landlocked (those living in entirely fresh water) salmon.
- Though some striped bass can spawn in fresh water and make their homes in salt water, there are many ‘stripers’ which remain landlocked.
- The maximum size of the landlocked variety appears to be about 762 mm although most individuals are somewhat smaller.
- Another landlocked salmon is the E. American sebago salmon, found in Sebago and other lakes and their associated rivers.
- The building of dams along the rivers has impacted the populations of white sturgeons by creating landlocked populations and destroying spawning grounds.
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