en
aboundMeaning:
tr
bol olmak, çok olmak, dolu olmak
The fields abound in wild flowers.
In this garden I obtain every product of nature in due season; in the spring it abounds with roses, lilies, hyacinths, and violets of the deepest bloom; in the summer with poppies, pears, and apples of every kind; and now in autumn, with grapes, figs, pomegranates and green myrtles.
Ah, Alsace! It is usually known for the beauty of its half-timbered houses, its renowned gastronomy and its famous Christmas markets. However, it is also a cultural crossroads in the heart of Europe. It links France, Switzerland and Germany through an incredible diversity of landscapes where, flanked by mountains and the banks of the Rhine, open-air activities abound.
English abounds in idioms.
English is a language abounding in idiomatic expressions.
About twenty-four miles from Mitylene a rich man had an estate, none finer than which could be found in all the surrounding country. The neighbouring woods abounded with game, the fields yielded corn, the hillocks were covered with vines, there was pasture land for the herds, and the whole was bounded by the sea, which washed an extensive smooth and sandy shore.
The husbandmen who ploughed those places, shrunk from the great worms abounding there.
Treasure chests abound in the dungeon, but so do horrible monsters.
This river abounds in trout.
Arabia abounds in oil.
Added on 2015-11-04 | by
m2gin |
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