eroded


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  • adj

Synonyms for eroded

worn away as by water or ice or wind

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Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
Washington DC [United States] January 20 ( ANI ): United States secretary of defence Jim Mattis has warned that the US military's competitive edge has eroded in every domain.
Hoping to speed this recovery, scientists are now dumping sediment from inland areas onto the eroded marshes.
But while grounds and their temples have largely been restored by the National Trust, the great palace itself, though watertight, was slowly being eroded by time and schoolboys.
The three counties with the greatest percentages of eroded coastlines are in Poland with 55 percent of the coast eroded, in Cyprus 37.8 percent, and Lativa 32.8 percent.
It had eroded the base of the pterygoid plates and infiltrated the lateral pterygoid muscle.
Gehrels of the University of Arizona in Tucson report that about half the zircons they analyzed came from the Appalachians, and about one-fourth had eroded from ancient rocks in central Canada.
The British reform is not, as the authors suggest, "widely viewed as a resounding success." Many observers complain that it has eroded legislative control over agencies.
This price initiative was linked to badly eroded profit margins as well as cost pressure from feedstocks.
During the last 50 years, while personal rights (speech, press, assembly, etc.) continue to be protected, basic private property principles have been eroded through the application of rent control, zoning, wetland and historic preservation laws.