바라보기, 언어, crevice, 크레비스, crevasse, 크레바스
바라보기, 언어, crevice, 크레비스, crevasse, 크레바스
1.
a narrow opening or crack in a hard surface and especially in rock
the termites crawled into a crevice in the ground.
흰개미는 땅속 틈새로 기어 들어갔다.
크레바스
crevasse
1.
a deep, narrow opening or crack in an area of thick ice or rock
크레바스(빙하 속의 깊이 갈라진 틈)
The mountain climbers fell into a crevasse.
A deep open crack in the thick ice on mountain
a deep opening, especially in ice, for example in a glacier
The majority of crevasse deaths happen to those who travel across glaciers unroped.
a deep crevice or fissure (as in a glacier or the earth)
The climber narrowly missed slipping into a crevasse.
A deep fissure, as in a glacier; a chasm
noun A fissure or crack: a term used by English writers in describing glaciers, to designate a rent or fissure in the ice, which may be of greater or less depth, and from an inch or two to many feet in width.
noun literally A crack or fissure in a glacier or snow field; a chasm.
A crevasse is a deep crack, that forms in a glacier or ice sheet that can be a few inches across to over 40 feet. Crevasses form as a result of the movement and resulting stress associated with the shear stress generated when two semi-rigid pieces above a plastic substrate have different rates of movement. The resulting intensity of the shear stress causes a breakage along the faces.
noun
a fissure, or deep cleft, in glacial ice, the earth's surface, etc
a deep crack in the earth's surface, the ice of a glacier, etc.
If you're heading to the North Pole by sled, watch out you don't fall into a crevasse — a deep fissure or crack in the snow or ice. Similar to the term "crevice," though "crevice" usually refers to a fissure in a rock face. Neither one is a nice place to get stuck.