arid

অনুর্বর
definition
adjective
hot and arid conditions
(of land or a climate) having little or no rain; too dry or barren to support vegetation.
his arid years in suburbia
lacking in interest, excitement, or meaning.
translation of 'arid'
শুকনো,
তাপদগ্ধ,
নীরস,
রসকষহীন
adjective
শুষ্ক,
অনুর্বর,
ঊষর,
রৌদ্রদগ্ধ,
শষ্পহীন
example
Intensive irrigation would reshape 'arid' lands and revolutionize rural life.
The 'arid' climate would easily sap the nutrients and moisture out of them.
Human stories are more interesting than an 'arid' study of theology.
It is an 'arid' climate with a few registered inches of rainfall in a normal year.
In fact, she says, half of the water used in that 'arid' climate is for lawns.
Communities in 'arid' climates often implement strategies for dealing with a lack of rainfall.
The 'arid' climate makes the desert the best outdoor setting to keep planes free of corrosion.
These findings are in contrast to earlier work that indicated an 'arid' climate.
The 'arid' land of this autonomous republic supports a nomadic lifestyle.
From the 'arid' climate of the Sahara to the cold wastes of Siberia, man has learnt how to cope in a wide variety of ways with the effects of the atmosphere.
As the sun sets on a bleak plain in the 'arid' Karoo region, the temperature plummets to below freezing.
Hemp grows in virtually all conditions from 'arid' desert to more temperate climes.
In the United States, such features show up sporadically in 'arid' lands from New Mexico to Idaho.
Its feedstock is a special variety of rapeseed bred to do well in the 'arid' climate of southern Colorado.
The 'arid' desert climate gets little rainfall, but the Rio Grande provides water for irrigation.
After filming he headed for Namibia, wanting to be in a dry hot and 'arid' climate after four months on a boat.
Next I'll tell you about my travels to the 'arid' lands south-east of the great Kalahari desert.
The inhabitants are dependent on crop farming which is difficult in the 'arid' land.
However, from Karadi to Dandi, the land is 'arid' and the vegetation scrubby.
Indeed, dry and warm storage frequently promotes after-ripening of seeds in species of warm and 'arid' climates.
Yoga classes without this element seem to me 'arid' and dull.
Ethanol has also been found to contribute to smog in 'arid' climates due to its volatile nature.
For day after day south of Marzuk we saw nothing but stony wastes and sand dunes with never a blade of grass or bush to relieve the 'aridity' .
By the way, Darwin was a naturalist and most would take his comments about Australia's limited prospects as relating to soil quality and 'aridity' , and the subsequently smaller potential population.
Book releases, art exhibitions, theatre camps and more, holding out the promise of being a haven for creativity in these times of 'aridness' .
The writer continues to investigate the ideas of care and love, but he also speculates 'aridly' on the nature of literary creativity.
The contributions to the Kelman symposium are - to be kind - patchy and smack 'aridly' of academe.
I am struck by how many serious intellectuals we have writing at the moment, not 'aridly' intellectual, but certainly with a spiritual dimension - the spirituality of the everyday.
Almost all of the Act One numbers fall a trifle austerely - not to say 'aridly' - on American ears, owing in part to the employment of Japanese instruments, melodies, and harmonies.
The lands of the Southwest, in their 'aridness' , showed him concretely the underlying fragility of the land community, and the interconnectedness of its members.
Credits: Google Translate