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qanat

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: qanāt

English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Classical Persian قنات (qanāt), from Arabic قَنَاة (qanāh).

Noun

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qanat (plural qanats)

  1. An underground conduit, between vertical shafts, that leads water from the interior of a hill to villages in the valley
    • 1981, Richard Edward Chapman, Geology and Water: An Introduction to Fluid Mechanics for Geologists, page 112:
      Shafts are dug to the required level along the planned route of the qanat, every 300 m or so [] .
    • 1988, Keith Stanley McLachlan, The Neglected Garden: The Politics and Ecology of Agriculture in Iran:
      Elsewhere over large areas of the plateau and the foothill regions, the qanat irrigation cultures were weakened considerably.
    • 2019, Tim Mackintosh-Smith, Arabs, Yale University Press, page 127:
      Its gardens are watered by rivers that invariably flow underground, like the subterranean qanats developed by the Persians.

Synonyms

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References

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  • For a schematic of a qanat, refer to Geology and Water: An Introduction to Fluid Mechanics for Geologists, by Richard Edward Chapman, 1981, page 112.

Crimean Tatar

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Noun

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qanat

  1. wing

Declension

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Derived terms

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References

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Tatar

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Noun

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qanat

  1. wing