Webster's Online Dictionary
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Definition: DREDGING

Part of Speech Definition
Verb 1. To sweep, dispel, displace or remove. [Eve - graph theoretic]
2. To drag or trawl.[Eve - graph theoretic]
3. Present participle conjugation of the verb dredge.[Eve - graph theoretic]
Verb Base
(dredge)
1. Cover before cooking; "dredge the chicken in flour before frying it".[Wordnet].
2. Search (as the bottom of a body of water) for something valuable or lost.[Wordnet].
3. Remove with a power shovel, usually from a bottom of a body of water.[Wordnet].
4. To catch or gather with a dredge; to deepen with a dredging machine.[Websters].
5. To sift or sprinkle flour, etc., on, as on roasting meat.[Websters].
6. Base verb from the following inflections: dredging, dredged, dredges, dredger, dredgers, dredgingly and dredgedly.[Eve - graph theoretic]

Sources: compiled from various sources, (under license) copyright 2008.

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"Dredging" is a common misspelling or typo for: dredgings.

Date "Dredging" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1824. (references)

Specialty Definition: DREDGING

Domain Definition
Administration 1: (1) A method for deepening streams, swamps, or other waters by scraping and removing solid materials from the bottom. Such actions can disturb the Ecosystem and cause silting that kills aquatic life. Dredging of contaminated muds can expose Biota to heavy metals and other toxic substances. (2) The process of digging up an removing material from wetlands or from the bottoms of waterways to clear them or make them deeper or wider. For example, tidal creeks in slat marshes are often dredged to make them wide enough for boat passage. Dredging and activities associated with it can damage wetlands. Dredging activities may be subject to regulation under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act (CWA). (references)
  2: Removal of mud from the bottom of water bodies using a scooping machine. This disturbs the ecosystem and causes silting that can kill aquatic life. Dredging of contaminated muds can expose aquatic life to heavy metals and other toxics. Dredging activities may be subject to regulation under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act. (references)
Energy 1: To clean, deepen or widen with a machine equipped with scooping or suction devices used in deepening harbors and waterways and in underwater mining. (references)
  2: The scooping, or suction of underwater material from a harbor, or waterway. Dredging is one form of channel modification. It is often too expensive to be practical because the dredged material must be disposed of somewhere and the stream will usually fill back up with sediment in a few years. Dredging is usually undertaken only on large rivers to maintain a navigation channel. (references)
Forestry The process of digging up and removing material from wetlands or from the bottoms of waterways to clear them or make them deeper or wider. (references)
Mining Removing solid matter from the bottom of an area covered by water. (references)
Technology Widening or deepening of water channel by removing sand, silt, mud, or gravel. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Common Expressions: DREDGING

Expressions Definition
Data dredging Data dredging is the term used to refer to the inappropriate (sometimes deliberately so) search for 'statistically significant' relationships in large quantities of data. This activity was formerly known in the statistical community as data mining, but that term is now in widespread use with a substantially different meaning, so the term data dredging is now used instead. The term data fishing is another label for doing data dredging. (references)
Dredging bucket A bucket for lifting material from a channel or riverbed. Source: Wordnet 3.0 Copyright © 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
Dredging machine A machine (commonly on a boat) used to scoop up mud, gravel, or obstructions from the bottom of rivers, docks, etc., so as to deepen them. Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Specialty Expressions: DREDGING

Expressions Domain Definition
Agitation dredging Mining Consists of pumping the discharge directly into the sea and using the tide to carry the fines to deeper water areas. Agitation dredging is employed only during ebb tide in tidal estuaries having swift tidal flows that willdisperse the accumulations of silt. (references)
Drag dredging Mining A method in which the bucket is lowered to the sea floor and dragged over the ocean floor for some distance in order to collect samples. Dredge and trawl hauls normally can only give a rough indication of heavy or light concentrations of the minerals within an area. (references)
Dredging conveyor Mining A scraper partially immersed in a vessel containing liquid used forremoving any solids that may settle therein. (references)
Dredging spoil Energy The discharge from a dredge. (references)
Dredging sump Mining A tank, forming part of the water circuit, in which slurry or small coal settles and is removed continuously by means of a scraper chain or scraperbuckets. Also called drag tank; sludge sump. (references)
Dredging tube Mining The large tube of a dredging machine that operates by suction. (references)
Dredging well Mining The opening through a dredging vessel in which the bucket ladders work.See also:bucket-ladder dredge. (references)
Inspector of dredging Occupations Estimates quantity of material dredged from bed of waterway, according to depth of residue deposited in scow, to ensure that dredging depth conforms to engineering specifications. Keeps records of findings. May drop measured lengths of weighted cable from scow to verify dredging depth. (references)
Tin dredging Mining The extraction of tin-bearing ore from placers by means of dredges. (references)
Wire-line dredging Mining In this method, digging tools or buckets are suspended on a steel cable and lowered to the sediment surface, where they are loaded and retrieved. Includes the use of drag-bucket and clamshell dredges, and generally to a depth of not more than 500 ft (152 m) below sea level. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Extended Definition: DREDGING


Dredging

Dredging is an excavation activity or operation usually carried out at least partly underwater, in shallow seas or fresh water areas with the purpose of gathering up bottom sediments and disposing of them at a different location.

This technique is often used to keep waterways navigable. It is also used as a way to replenish sand on some public beaches, where too much sand has been lost because of coastal erosion. Dredging is also used as a technique for fishing for certain species of edible clams and crabs, see fishing dredge.

A dredge is a device for scraping or sucking the seabed, used for dredging. A dredger is a ship or boat equipped with a dredge (though in American usage, there is no added letter).

The process of dredging creates spoils (excess material), which are conveyed to a location different from the dredged area. Dredging can produce materials for land reclamation or other purposes (usually construction-related), and has also historically played a significant role in gold mining. Dredging can create disturbance in aquatic ecosystems, often with adverse impacts.

Uses

Usage

  • Capital: dredging carried out to create a new harbour, berth or waterway, or to deepen existing facilities in order to allow larger ships access. Because capital works usually involve hard material or high-volume works, the work is usually done using a cutter suction dredge or large trailing suction hopper dredge, but for rock works drilling and blasting along with mechanical excavation may be used.
  • Preparatory: work and excavation for future bridges, piers or docks/wharves, often connected with foundation work.
  • Maintenance: dredging to deepen or maintain navigable waterways or channels which are threatened to become silted with the passage of time, due to sedimented sand and mud, possibly making them too shallow for navigation. This is often carried out with a trailing suction hopper dredge. Most dredging is for this purpose, and it may also be done to maintain the holding capacity of reservoirs or lakes.
  • Land reclamation: dredging to mine sand, clay or rock from the seabed and using it to construct new land elsewhere. This is typically performed by a cutter-suction dredge or trailing suction hopper dredge. The material may also be used for flood or erosion control.
  • Beach nourishment: mining sand offshore and placing on a beach to replace sand eroded by storms or wave action. This is done to enhance the recreational and protective function of the beaches, which can be eroded by human activity or by storms. This is typically performed by a cutter-suction dredge or trailing suction hopper dredge.
  • Harvesting materials: dredging sediment for elements like gold or other valuable trace substances.
  • Seabed mining: a possible future use, recovering natural metal ore nodules from the sea's abyssal plains.
  • Anti-eutrophication: Dredging is an expensive option for the remediation of eutrophied (or de-oxygenated) water bodies. However, as artificially elevated phosphorus levels in the sediment aggravate the eutrophication process, controlled sediment removal is occasionally the only option for the reclamation of still waters.
  • Contaminant remediation: to reclaim areas affected by chemical spills, storm water surges (with urban runoff), and other soil contaminations. Disposal becomes a proportionally large factor in these operations.
  • Removing trash and debris: often done in combination with maintenance dredging, this process removes non-natural matter from the bottoms of rivers and canals and harbors.

Relevance

Without the many and almost non-stop dredging operations world wide, much of the world's commerce would be impaired, often within a few months, since much of world's goods travel by ship, and need to access harbours or seas via channels. Recreational boating also would be constrained to the smallest vessels. The majority of marine dredging operations (and the disposal of the dredged material) will require that appropriate licences are obtained from the relevant regulatory authorities, and dredging is usually carried out by (or for) harbour companies or corresponding government agencies.

Types of dredging vessels

Suction

These operate by sucking through a long tube, like some vacuum cleaners. A plain suction dredger has no tool at the end of the suction pipe to disturb the material. This is often the most commonly used form of dredging.[citation needed]

Trailing suction

A trailing suction hopper dredger (TSHD) trails its suction pipe when working, and loads the dredge spoil into one or more hoppers in the vessel. When the hoppers are full, the TSHD sails to a disposal area and either dumps the material through doors in the hull or pumps the material out of the hoppers. Some dredges also self-offload using drag buckets and conveyors. The largest trailing suction hopper dredger in the world is currently Cristobal Colon (launched July 4th, 2008 [1]); its sister ship Leiv Eriksson is under construction as of the end of 2008 (keel laid August 27, 2008, expected launch July 2009[2]). Main design specs for the Cristobal Colon and the Leiv Eriksson are: 46,000 cubic meter hopper and a design dredging depth of 155 m.[3] Next largest is HAM 318 (Van Oord) with its 37,293 cubic meter hopper and a maximum dredging depth of 101 m.

Cutter suction

A cutter-suction dredger's (CSD) suction tube has a cutter head at the suction inlet, to loosen the earth and transport it to the suction mouth. The cutter can also be used for hard surface materials like gravel or rock. The dredged soil is usually sucked up by a wear-resistant centrifugal pump and discharged through a pipe line or to a barge. In recent years, dredgers with more powerful cutters have been built in order to excavate harder rock without blasting. The two largest cutter suction dredgers in the world are Deme's D'Artagnan (28,200 kW total installed power)[4] and Jan De Nul's J.F.J. DeNul (27,240 kW).[5]

Auger suction

This process functions like a cutter suction dredger, but the cutting tool is a rotating Archimedean screw set at right angles to the suction pipe. The first widely used auger dredges were designed by Mud Cat Dredges[6] in the 1980s.

Jet-lift

These use the Venturi effect of a concentrated high-speed stream of water to pull the nearby water, together with bed material, into a pipe.

Air-lift

An airlift is a type of small suction dredge. It is sometimes used like other dredges. At other times, an airlift is used, handheld underwater by a diver. It works by blowing air into the pipe, and that air, being lighter than water, rises inside the pipe, dragging water with it.

Bucket

A bucket dredger is a dredger equipped with a bucket dredge, which is a device that picks up sediment by mechanical means, often with many circulating buckets attached to a wheel or chain. Some bucket dredgers and grab dredgers are powerful enough to rip out coral to make a shipping channel through coral reefs.

Grab

A grab dredger picks up seabed material with a clam shell grab, which hangs from an onboard crane or a crane ship, or is carried by a hydraulic arm, or is mounted like on a dragline. This technique is often used in excavation of bay mud. Most of these dredges are crane barges with spuds.

Backhoe/dipper

A backhoe/dipper dredge has a backhoe like on some excavators. A crude but usable backhoe dredger can be made by mounting a land-type backhoe excavator on a pontoon. The three largest backhoe dredgers in the world were Tauracavor (Great Lakes), New York (Great Lakes) and Il Principe (Jan De Nul).[citation needed] They featured barge-mounted excavators. Small backhoe dredgers can be track-mounted and work from the bank of ditches. A backhoe dredger is equipped with a half-open shell. The shell is filled moving towards the machine. Usually dredges material is loaded in barges. This machine is mainly used in harbors and other shallow water.

Water injection

A water injection dredger uses a small jet to inject water under low pressure (to prevent the sediment from exploding into the surrounding waters) into the seabed to bring the sediment in suspension, which then becomes a turbidity current, which flows away down slope, is moved by a second burst of water from the WID or is carried away in natural currents. Water injection results in a lot of sediment in the water which makes measurement with most hydrographic equipment (for instance: singlebeam echosounders) difficult.

Pneumatic

These dredgers use a chamber with inlets, out of which the water is pumped with the inlets closed. It is usually suspended from a crane on land or from a small pontoon or barge. Its effectiveness depends on depth pressure.

Bed leveler

This is a bar or blade which is pulled over the seabed behind any suitable ship or boat. It has an effect similar to that of a bulldozer on land.

Krabbelaar

This is an early type of dredger which was formerly used in shallow water in the Netherlands. It was a flat-bottomed boat with spikes sticking out of its bottom. As tide current pulled the boat, the spikes scraped seabed material loose, and the tide current washed the material away, hopefully to deeper water. Krabbelaar is Dutch for "scratcher".

Snagboat

Main article: Snagboat

A snagboat is designed to remove big debris from rivers and canals.

Amphibious

Some of these are any of the above types of dredger, which can operate normally, or by extending legs, also known as spuds, so it stands on the seabed with its hull out of the water. Some forms can go on land.

Some of these are land-type backhoe excavators whose wheels are on long hinged legs so it can drive into shallow water and keep its cab out of water. Some of these may not have a floatable hull and, if so, cannot work in deep water.

  • Oliver Evans (1755-1819) in 1804 invented an amphibious dredger which was America's first steam-powered road vehicle.

Submersible

These are usually used to recover useful materials from the seabed. Many of them travel on caterpillar tracks. A unique variant[7] is intended to walk on legs on the seabed.[8]

Fishing

Fishing dredges are used to collect various species of clams scallops, oysters or crabs from the seabed. These dredges have the form of a scoop made of chain mesh, and are towed by a fishing boat. Careless dredging can be destructive to the seabed. Nowadays some scallop dredging is replaced by collecting via scuba diving.

Police drag

In some police departments a small dredge (sometimes called a drag) is used to find and recover objects and bodies from underwater. The bodies may be murder victims, or people who committed suicide by drowning, or victims of accidents. It is sometimes pulled by men walking on the bank.

Images

Disposal of materials

In a "hopper dredger", the dredged materials end up in a large onboard hold called a "hopper." A suction hopper dredger is usually used for maintenance dredging. A hopper dredge usually has doors in its bottom to empty the dredged materials, but some dredges empty their hoppers by splitting the two halves of their hulls on giant hinges. Either way, as the vessel dredges, excess water in the dredged materials is spilled off as the heavier solids settle to the bottom of the hopper. This excess water is returned to the sea to reduce weight and increase the amount of solid material (or slurry) that can be carried in one load. When the hopper is filled with slurry, the dredger stops dredging and goes to a dump site and empties its hopper.

Some hopper dredges are designed so they can also be emptied from above using pumps if dump sites are unavailable or if the dredge material is contaminated. Sometimes the slurry of dredgings and water is pumped straight into pipes which deposit it on nearby land. Other times, it is pumped into barges (also called scows), which deposit it elsewhere while the dredge continues its work.

When contaminated (toxic) sediments are to be removed, or large volume inland disposal sites are unavailable, dredge slurries are reduced to dry solids via a process known as dewatering. Current dewatering techniques employ either centrifuges, large textile based filters or polymer flocculant/congealant based apparatus.

In many projects, slurry dewatering is performed in large inland settling pits, although this is becoming less and less common as mechanical dewatering techniques continue to improve.

Similarly, many groups (most notable in east Asia) are performing research towards utilizing dewatered sediments for the production of concretes and construction block, although the high organic content (in many cases) of this material is a hindrance toward such ends.

Environmental impacts

Dredging can create disturbance to aquatic ecosystems, often with adverse impacts. In addition, dredge spoils may contain toxic chemicals that may have an adverse effect on the disposal area; furthermore, the process of dredging often dislodges chemicals residing in benthic substrates and injects them into the water column.

The activity of dredging can create the following principal impacts to the environment:

  • Release of toxic chemicals (including heavy metals and PCB) from bottom sediments into the water column.
  • Short term increases in turbidity, which can affect aquatic species metabolism and interfere with spawning.
  • Secondary effects from water column contamination of uptake of heavy metals, DDT and other persistent organic toxins, via food chain uptake and subsequent concentrations of these toxins in higher organisms including humans.
  • Secondary impacts to marsh productivity from sedimentation
  • Tertiary impacts to avifauna which may prey upon contaminated aquatic organisms
  • Secondary impacts to aquatic and benthic organisms' metabolism and mortality
  • Possible contamination of dredge spoils sites

Major dredging companies

Four companies control roughly 60% of the world dredging market.[9]

Dredging in nature

Some animals have evolved adaptations to find their food by dredging:

  • Ducks
  • Grey whales: they filter seabed sand with their baleen

See also

  • Queen of the Netherlands (ship), a big dredger
  • WT Preston, a snagboat
  • Weeks Marine, a dredging company

External links

Nautical portal

References

  1. http://www.sandandgravel.com/news/article.asp?v1=11114
  2. http://www.sandandgravel.com/news/article.asp?v1=11221
  3. http://www.jandenul.com
  4. http://www.deme.be/set_main.html
  5. http://www.jandenul.com/jdn.html
  6. http://www.mudcat.com
  7. http://www.nio.org/past_events/inchoe/dredging_eia.jsp#dredging_1
  8. "Concept of a mathematical model for prediction of major design parameters of a submersible dredger/miner" by Sritama Sarkar, Neil Bose, Mridul Sarkar, and Dan Walker, in "3rd Indian National Conference on Harbour and Ocean Engineering, National Institute of Oceanography", Dona Paula, Goa 403 004 India, 7 - 9 December 2004
  9. http://www.edie.net/products/view_entry.asp?id=2111

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Dredging". Image Credit.



Topics by Level of Interest: DREDGING

Topics sorted by level of Interest Level (1=low, 600=high)     Topics sorted Alphabetically Level (1=low, 600=high)
Dredging 36     Data dredging 8
Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company 10     Dredging 36
Data dredging 8     Dredging Corporation of India Limited 6
Dredging Corporation of India Limited 6     Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company 10

Source: the editor, created by/for EVE to gauge likely levels of human interest in linguistically triggered topics (compiled across various sources, such as Wikipedia and specialty expression glosses).

"dredging" is a common misspelling or typo for: dredgings.

Synonyms: dredging
Position Synonyms (sorted by strength)

Verb

carting, embroiling, hauling, puffing, scuffing, tangling, trailing.
Consider also: flouring, dusting, removing, surfacing, powdering, cleaning, searching, shovelling, dipping, elevating, extirpating, uprooting, sifting, scouring.

Noun

haling.
Consider also: sprinkling, coating, cleansing.

Adjective

deepening.

Other

shoveling, besprinkling.

Expression

dredge working.
Source: Eve, based on meta analysis. Top

Computed Synonyms: dredging

 Rank

 Intensity 

 Word

 Synonyms

 Synonyms of synonym

 1   40.3597   dredging     dredgering     raking, shoveling, harrowing, shovelling, joggering   
 2   32.3093   dredging     sprinkling     scattering, spraying, sprinkle, splashing, pouring   
 3   23.3092   dredging     scattering     dispersing, dissipating, sprinkling, disseminating, scatter   
 4   23.0092   dredging     sweep     knock out, evacuate, beat, remove, break   
 5   22.3091   dredging     besprinkling     bestrewing, spraying, aspersing, spattering, perfusing   
 6   21.3093   dredging     bestrewing     scattering, sprinkling, besprinkling, dispersing, overspreading   
 7   20.4297   dredging     dragging     drag, creep, pull, trailing, to drag   
 8   20.3094   dredging     flirting     fluttering, flirt, coqueting, jilting, flirtation   
 9   18.0092   dredging     agreed     agree, matched, corresponded, acknowledged, harmonized   
 10   12.3195   dredging     dusting     dirting, gritting, stardusting, coking, dust   
 11   11.3094   dredging     scouring     scrubbing, rubbing, scanning, exploring, excavating   
 12   10.3092   dredging     excavating     rummaging, fumbling, scanning, grabbling, browsing   
 13   7.3094   dredging     scooping     ladling, shoveling, shovelling, picking, excavating   
 14   7.3094   dredging     sifting     winnowing, sieving, percolating, screening, visiting   
 15   6.3094   dredging     cleansing     cleaning, unpicking, purge, heal, to heal   
--------------------     365 synonyms ranked from 16 to 380 abridged     --------------------

Source: calculated by Eve using graph theory. "Intensity" is a score indicating the number of overlapping cliques where the word pair is found (an integer before the decimal); the first digit after the decimal is the number of overlapping terminal characters up to 9; the second characters is number of leading common characters up to 9; the last two digits measure the Levenshtein distance subtracted from 100. Top

Computed Synonyms via Expressions: dredging

 Rank

 Intensity 

 Word

 Synonyms

 Synonyms of synonym

 1   19.0593   dredging     to dredge     dredge, to excavate, sweep   
 2   19.0089   dredging     to excavate     excavate, dig, to dredge   
 3   18.0091   dredging     to cruise     flirt, to dredge, to excavate   
 4   18.0088   dredging     to try it on     dredge, to cruise, to dredge   
 5   3.1193   dredging     dig up     excavate, dig out, dig   
 6   3.0091   dredging     blow off     turn out, eject, flush   
 7   2.0092   dredging     run off     desert the army, get away, flee   
 8   2.0091   dredging     to bleed     bleed, cut, cut off   
 9   2.0091   dredging     flow off     bleed, run off, pour out   
 10   2.0086   dredging     take a purgative     bleed, evacuate the bowels, to bleed   
 11   2.0083   dredging     give a purgative to     take a purgative, to bleed, serve   
 12   2.0081   dredging     evacuate the bowels     take a purgative, to bleed, bleed   
 13   1.3292   dredging     line drawing     design, drawing, picture   
 14   1.3088   dredging     go gunning for     shoot, driving, chasing   
 15   1.2293   dredging     draw along     drag, draw, drawing   
--------------------     21 synonyms ranked from 16 to 36 abridged     --------------------

Source: calculated by Eve using graph theory. "Intensity" is a score indicating the number of overlapping cliques where the word pair is found (an integer before the decimal); the first digit after the decimal is the number of overlapping terminal characters up to 9; the second characters is number of leading common characters up to 9; the last two digits measure the Levenshtein distance subtracted from 100. Top

Computed Expressions: dredging

 Rank

 Intensity 

 Expression

 Synonyms

 Synonyms of synonym

 1   7.0590   dredging engine     dredger     dredgerer, excavator   
 2   6.1287   dredging engine     drag     pull, draw   
 3   4.9995   foundation by dredging     foundation by grabbing         
 4   3.5595   dredging wells     grabbing wells         
 5   3.1590   dredging engine     dredge     dredger, drag   
 6   3.0185   dredging engine     excavator     scourer, investigator   
 7   2.8895   open cylinder with dredging wells     open cylinder with grabbing wells         
 8   2.8892   dredging engine     dredging     dredgering, sprinkling   
 9   2.1087   dredging engine     mud barge     dredge, bag auger   
 10   2.1087   dredging engine     bag auger     sack borer, dredger   
 11   2.0289   dredging engine     dragnet     trawl, Seine   
 12   2.0188   dredging engine     digger     excavator, navvy   
 13   2.0086   dredging engine     sweep     knock out, evacuate   
 14   2.0085   dredging engine     sack borer     sack, bag auger   
 15   2.0084   dredging engine     sack     bag, pouch   
--------------------     55 expressions ranked from 16 to 70 abridged     --------------------

Source: calculated by Eve using graph theory. "Intensity" is a score indicating the number of overlapping cliques where the word pair is found (an integer before the decimal); the first digit after the decimal is the number of overlapping terminal characters up to 9; the second characters is number of leading common characters up to 9; the last two digits measure the Levenshtein distance subtracted from 100. Top

Synonyms within Context: dredging

Context Synonyms within Context

Elevation

Dredging machine, capstan, crane, derrick, dredge, dredger, lever, winch, windlass.

Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus. Top

Translations: DREDGING

Language Translations (or nearest inflections or synonyms, in parentheses)
Al Arabiya مجروفات (dredge, dredged, dredging), جَرَّفَ (curette, abrade, abraded, abrades, abrading), كَرَّاكَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), كاسِحَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, harrow), مِنْكاش (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, hack), جَرَفَ (shovel, sweep, sweeping, dredge, dredged). Additional references: Al Arabiya, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Al Fus-Ha مجروفات (dredge, dredged, dredging), جَرَّفَ (curette, abrade, abraded, abrades, abrading), كَرَّاكَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), كاسِحَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, harrow), مِنْكاش (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, hack), جَرَفَ (shovel, sweep, sweeping, dredge, dredged). Additional references: Al Fus-Ha, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Arabic مجروفات (dredge, dredged, dredging), جَرَّفَ (curette, abrade, abraded, abrades, abrading), كَرَّاكَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), كاسِحَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, harrow), مِنْكاش (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, hack), جَرَفَ (shovel, sweep, sweeping, dredge, dredged). Additional references: Arabic, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Bahasa Indonesia pengerukan (dredging, exploition), keruk (dredging, scraping sound, scratching). Additional references: Bahasa Indonesia, Indonesia, Java, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Bohemian poprášit (dredge, dust, powder, dredged, dredging), jaru anje (dredging), vybagruje (dredging), hloubení dna (dredge, dredging), bagrování (excavation, dredging, dredging operations). Additional references: Bohemian, Czech Republic, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Brazilian Portuguese dragagem (dredging). Additional references: Brazilian Portuguese, Portugal, Angola, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Breton paotreta ha merc'heta (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging). Additional references: Breton, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Brezhoneg paotreta ha merc'heta (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging). Additional references: Brezhoneg, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Capeverdian tra kaskádju ku reia n-um riu (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging), bati koru (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging). Additional references: Capeverdian, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Central Danish opmudrende (dredging), opmudring (dredging), uddybning (deepening, dredging, excavation). Additional references: Central Danish, Denmark, Germany, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Cestina poprášit (dredge, dust, powder, dredged, dredging), jaru anje (dredging), vybagruje (dredging), hloubení dna (dredge, dredging), bagrování (excavation, dredging, dredging operations). Additional references: Cestina, Czech Republic, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Simplified 疏浚 (dredging, dredge, to dredge), 挖泥 (dredging). Additional references: Chinese Simplified, China, Brunei, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Chinese Traditional 挖泥 (dredging), 疏浚 (dredge, dredging, to dredge). Additional references: Chinese Traditional, China, Brunei, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Corse dragà (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging), svavà (agreed, dragging, dredge, dredging, flirt), purgà (bleed, to bleed, dredge, agreed, blow off), dunnighjà (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep), aggancià (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep). Additional references: Corse, France, Italy, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Corsi dragà (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging), svavà (agreed, dragging, dredge, dredging, flirt), purgà (bleed, to bleed, dredge, agreed, blow off), dunnighjà (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep), aggancià (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep). Additional references: Corsi, France, Italy, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Corsican dragà (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging), svavà (agreed, dragging, dredge, dredging, flirt), purgà (bleed, to bleed, dredge, agreed, blow off), dunnighjà (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep), aggancià (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep). Additional references: Corsican, France, Italy, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Corso dragà (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging), svavà (agreed, dragging, dredge, dredging, flirt), purgà (bleed, to bleed, dredge, agreed, blow off), dunnighjà (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep), aggancià (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep). Additional references: Corso, France, Italy, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Corsu dragà (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging), svavà (agreed, dragging, dredge, dredging, flirt), purgà (bleed, to bleed, dredge, agreed, blow off), dunnighjà (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep), aggancià (dredge, agreed, dragging, flirt, sweep). Additional references: Corsu, France, Italy, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Czech poprášit (dredge, dust, powder, dredged, dredging), jaru anje (dredging), vybagruje (dredging), hloubení dna (dredge, dredging), bagrování (excavation, dredging, dredging operations). Additional references: Czech, Czech Republic, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Daco-Rumanian dragaj (dredging). Additional references: Daco-Rumanian, Romania, Hungary, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Danish opmudrende (dredging), opmudring (dredging), uddybning (deepening, dredging, excavation). Additional references: Danish, Denmark, Germany, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Dansk opmudrende (dredging), opmudring (dredging), uddybning (deepening, dredging, excavation). Additional references: Dansk, Denmark, Germany, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Dari لارهبى كردن (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging). Additional references: Dari, Iran, Indo-European, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Deutsch ausbaggernd (dredging), Ausbaggerungen (dredging), Ausbaggernden (dredging), Ausbaggern (dredge, drag, dredging, excavate, to dredge). Additional references: Deutsch, Germany, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Dutch baggeren (dredge, dredging, drag, flounder, sludging), dregt (dredge, dredged, dredging), baggerwerk (dredging). Additional references: Dutch, Netherlands, Aruba, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Finnish ruoppaus (dredging), jauhottaa (flour, dredge, dredged, dredging). Additional references: Finnish, Finland, Russia (Europe), dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Français dragage (dredging, chaining, sludging, pulling), excavation (excavation, excavate, dredging, hollow, pit), draguer (dredge, sweep, flirt, cruise, drag), saupoudrant (dredging, besprinkling, powdering, scattering), drague (dredge, drag, dredger, dragnet, friction feeder). Additional references: Français, France, Algeria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
French dragage (dredging, chaining, sludging, pulling), excavation (excavation, excavate, dredging, hollow, pit), draguer (dredge, sweep, flirt, cruise, drag), saupoudrant (dredging, besprinkling, powdering, scattering), drague (dredge, drag, dredger, dragnet, friction feeder). Additional references: French, France, Algeria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Gaelg sleaydey (drag, draggle, draw along, dredge, dredging), duinaghey (dredge, dredging). Additional references: Gaelg, United Kingdom, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Gailck sleaydey (drag, draggle, draw along, dredge, dredging), duinaghey (dredge, dredging). Additional references: Gailck, United Kingdom, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
German ausbaggernd (dredging), Ausbaggerungen (dredging), Ausbaggernden (dredging), Ausbaggern (dredge, drag, dredging, excavate, to dredge). Additional references: German, Germany, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Greek βυθοκόρηση (dredging). Additional references: Greek, Greece, Albania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Greek (transliteration) vithokorisi (dredging). Additional references: Greek, Greece, Albania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguk Mal 준설기 (dredge, dredger, dredging), 준설한 토사 (dredging), 준설 (dredging). Additional references: Hanguk Mal, Korea, South, Korea, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Hanguohua 준설기 (dredge, dredger, dredging), 준설한 토사 (dredging), 준설 (dredging). Additional references: Hanguohua, Korea, South, Korea, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Hebrew רפוח (dig, digger, dredge, dredged, dredges). Additional references: Hebrew, Israel, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
High Arabic مجروفات (dredge, dredged, dredging), جَرَّفَ (curette, abrade, abraded, abrades, abrading), كَرَّاكَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), كاسِحَة (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, harrow), مِنْكاش (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging, hack), جَرَفَ (shovel, sweep, sweeping, dredge, dredged). Additional references: High Arabic, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
High German ausbaggernd (dredging), Ausbaggerungen (dredging), Ausbaggernden (dredging), Ausbaggern (dredge, drag, dredging, excavate, to dredge). Additional references: High German, Germany, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Hochdeutsch ausbaggernd (dredging), Ausbaggerungen (dredging), Ausbaggernden (dredging), Ausbaggern (dredge, drag, dredging, excavate, to dredge). Additional references: Hochdeutsch, Germany, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Hungarian behint (to dredge, to dust, to strew, dredge, sowed). Additional references: Hungarian, Hungary, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Indonesian pengerukan (dredging, exploition), keruk (dredging, scraping sound, scratching). Additional references: Indonesian, Indonesia, Java, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Italian dragaggio (dredging, sweeping), dragando (dragging, dredging), draga (dredge, drag, drags, dredge ship, dredger). Additional references: Italian, Italy, Croatia, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Ivrit רפוח (dig, digger, dredge, dredged, dredges). Additional references: Ivrit, Israel, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Japanese 浚渫 (dredging, dredged), しゅんせつ (dredging, dredges), さらい (dredging, rehearsal, review), 浚渫作業 (dredging operations), しゅんせつさぎょう (dredging operations). Additional references: Japanese, Japan, Taiwan, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Korean 준설기 (dredge, dredger, dredging), 준설한 토사 (dredging), 준설 (dredging). Additional references: Korean, Korea, South, Korea, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Langadoc furer (to hunt, dredge, examine, explore, to examine). Additional references: Langadoc, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Languedoc furer (to hunt, dredge, examine, explore, to examine). Additional references: Languedoc, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Languedocien furer (to hunt, dredge, examine, explore, to examine). Additional references: Languedocien, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Latvian bagareana (dredging). Additional references: Latvian, Latvia, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Latviska bagareana (dredging). Additional references: Latviska, Latvia, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Lengadoucian furer (to hunt, dredge, examine, explore, to examine). Additional references: Lengadoucian, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Lettisch bagareana (dredging). Additional references: Lettisch, Latvia, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Lettish bagareana (dredging). Additional references: Lettish, Latvia, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Lietuvi gilinimo darbai (dredging). Additional references: Lietuvi, Lithuania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Litauische gilinimo darbai (dredging). Additional references: Litauische, Lithuania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Litewski gilinimo darbai (dredging). Additional references: Litewski, Lithuania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Lithuanian gilinimo darbai (dredging). Additional references: Lithuanian, Lithuania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Litovskiy gilinimo darbai (dredging). Additional references: Litovskiy, Lithuania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Liutuviskai gilinimo darbai (dredging). Additional references: Liutuviskai, Lithuania, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Magyar behint (to dredge, to dust, to strew, dredge, sowed). Additional references: Magyar, Hungary, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Manx sleaydey (drag, draggle, draw along, dredge, dredging), duinaghey (dredge, dredging). Additional references: Manx, United Kingdom, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Manx Gaelic sleaydey (drag, draggle, draw along, dredge, dredging), duinaghey (dredge, dredging). Additional references: Manx Gaelic, United Kingdom, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Marseillais fura (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging). Additional references: Marseillais, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Moldavian dragaj (dredging). Additional references: Moldavian, Romania, Hungary, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Norwegian oppmudrende (dredging), mudring (dredging). Additional references: Norwegian, Norway, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Occitani furer (to hunt, dredge, examine, explore, to examine). Additional references: Occitani, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Parsi لارهبى كردن (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging). Additional references: Parsi, Iran, Indo-European, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Patois Stephanois minater (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging). Additional references: Patois Stephanois, France, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Persian لارهبى كردن (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging). Additional references: Persian, Iran, Indo-European, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Persian (Farsi) لارهبى كردن (dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging). Additional references: Persian (Farsi), Iran, Indo-European, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Polish pogłębiać (deepen, dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), bagrowanie (dredging), dragować (dredging). Additional references: Polish, Poland, Czech Republic, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Polnisch pogłębiać (deepen, dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), bagrowanie (dredging), dragować (dredging). Additional references: Polnisch, Poland, Czech Republic, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Polski pogłębiać (deepen, dredge, dredged, dredges, dredging), bagrowanie (dredging), dragować (dredging). Additional references: Polski, Poland, Czech Republic, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Portuguese dragagem (dredging), dragando (dragging, dredging). Additional references: Portuguese, Portugal, Angola, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Provençal furer (dredge, sweep, dredging, agreed, dragging). Additional references: Provençal, France, Monaco, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Romanian dragaj (dredging). Additional references: Romanian, Romania, Hungary, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Rumanian dragaj (dredging). Additional references: Rumanian, Romania, Hungary, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Ruotsi muddrande (dredging), muddring (dredging). Additional references: Ruotsi, Sweden, Finland, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Russian черпать (dredge, dredged, dredging, ladle, spoon), землечерпательные работы (dredging), драгирование (dredging). Additional references: Russian, Russia, China, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Russian (transliteration) cherpatʹ (dredge, dredged, dredging, ladle, spoon), zemlecherpatelʹnye raboty (dredging), dragirovanie (dredging). Additional references: Russian, Russia, China, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Russki черпать (dredge, dredged, dredging, ladle, spoon), землечерпательные работы (dredging), драгирование (dredging). Additional references: Russki, Russia, China, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Russki (transliteration) cherpatʹ (dredge, dredged, dredging, ladle, spoon), zemlecherpatelʹnye raboty (dredging), dragirovanie (dredging). Additional references: Russki, Russia, China, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Sjaelland opmudrende (dredging), opmudring (dredging), uddybning (deepening, dredging, excavation). Additional references: Sjaelland, Denmark, Germany, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovak bagrovanie (dredging). Additional references: Slovak, Slovakia, Hungary, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovakian bagrovanie (dredging). Additional references: Slovakian, Slovakia, Hungary, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovene poglabljanje dna (dredging). Additional references: Slovene, Slovenia, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovenian poglabljanje dna (dredging). Additional references: Slovenian, Slovenia, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Slovenscina poglabljanje dna (dredging). Additional references: Slovenscina, Slovenia, Austria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Spanish dragado (dredge, dredged, dredging, dragged, dragging), dragando (dragging, dredging, trawling), espolvoreado (dredging, fluffing, powdering, sifted, sprinkled), dragar (dredge, drag, sweep, dragging, draw), dragados (dredging, dredgings), draga (dredge, dredger, excavator, drag, drag boat), aparato para rastrear (dredge, dredging). Additional references: Spanish, Spain, Mexico, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Suomea ruoppaus (dredging), jauhottaa (flour, dredge, dredged, dredging). Additional references: Suomea, Finland, Russia (Europe), dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Suomi ruoppaus (dredging), jauhottaa (flour, dredge, dredged, dredging). Additional references: Suomi, Finland, Russia (Europe), dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Svenska muddrande (dredging), muddring (dredging). Additional references: Svenska, Sweden, Finland, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Swedish muddrande (dredging), muddring (dredging). Additional references: Swedish, Sweden, Finland, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Turkish üzerine un serpmek (dredge, dredged, dredging, flour), tarama (hatching, scanning, sweep, carding, comb), taraklama (carding, combing, dredging, harrowing, raking). Additional references: Turkish, Turkey, Bulgaria, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Ukrainian Екскаватор (dredges, dredging, excavators). Additional references: Ukrainian, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Ukrainian (transliteration) ekskavator (dredges, dredging, excavators). Additional references: Ukrainian, dredging. (volunteer & more translations)
Source: Eve, based on a combination of meta analysis and graph theory (for near and back translations). Top

Constructed Language Translations: DREDGING

Language Translations for “dredging” or closest synonym(s); back translations in parentheses.
Athag drathagedgathaging (dredging). Additional references: Athag, dredging. (volunteer)
Double Dutch dragedgaging (dredging). Additional references: Double Dutch, dredging. (volunteer)
Leet [)2£[)&|& (dredging). Additional references: Leet, dredging. (volunteer)
Oppish dropedgoping (dredging). Additional references: Oppish, dredging. (volunteer)
Pig Latin edgingdray (dredging). Additional references: Pig Latin, dredging. (volunteer)
Terran B dragagen (dredging). Additional references: Terran B, dredging. (volunteer)
Ubbi Dubbi drubedgubing (dredging). Additional references: Ubbi Dubbi, dredging. (volunteer)
Source: compiled by the editor. Top