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aqueduct. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
aqueduct, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
aqueduct in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
aqueduct you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Alternative forms
Etymology
Adapted from the Latin aquaeductus (“conveyance of water”), from aqua (“water”) + dūcō (“I lead”, “I bring”); compare the French aqueduc.
Pronunciation
Usage notes
The newer IPA(key): /ˈɑk-/ pronunciation (prescriptive based on the Latin etymology) has been objected to by some commentators.
Noun
aqueduct (plural aqueducts)
- An artificial channel that is constructed to convey water from one location to another.
- A structure carrying water over a river or depression, especially in regards to ancient aqueducts.
2017, Kamila Shamsie, Home Fire, Bloomsbury (2018), page 57:All the years he’d been down there in the traffic he’d taken this aqueduct for just another bridge, nothing to tell you that canal boats and waterfowl were being carried along above your head.
- (anatomy) A structure conveying fluid, such as the cerebral aqueduct or vestibular aqueduct.
Derived terms
Translations
an artificial channel conveying water
- Asturian: acueductu m
- Belarusian: акведу́к m (akvjedúk), аквэду́к m (akvedúk) (taraškievica)
- Bulgarian: акведу́кт m (akvedúkt)
- Catalan: aqüeducte (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 水渠 (zh) (shuǐqú)
- Czech: akvadukt (cs) m
- Danish: akvædukt c
- Dutch: aquaduct (nl) n
- Esperanto: akvedukto
- Finnish: akvedukti (fi)
- French: aqueduc (fr) m
- Galician: levada f, acueduto (gl) m
- Georgian: აკვედუკი (aḳveduḳi)
- German: Aquädukt (de) m
- Greek: υδραγωγείο (el) n (ydragogeío)
- Ancient: ὑδραγώγιον n (hudragṓgion), ὀχετός m (okhetós)
- Hungarian: vízvezeték (hu)
- Italian: acquedotto (it) m
- Japanese: 水道橋 (ja) (suidōkyō)
- Korean: 수도교 (sudogyo)
- Latin: aquaeductus (la) m
- Latvian: ūdensvads m, akvedukts m
- Lithuanian: akvedukas m
- Malay: akueduk
- Malayalam: നീർച്ചാൽ (ml) (nīṟccāl)
- Navajo: tó yaʼnidaʼaazgééd
- Old English: wætergelæt
- Polish: akwedukt (pl) m
- Portuguese: aqueduto (pt) m
- Quechua: witkhu, pincha
- Romanian: apeduct (ro) n
- Russian: акведу́к (ru) m (akvedúk)
- Serbo-Croatian: akvèdukt (sh) m, akvadȕkt (sh) m, vodovod (sh)
- Slovak: akvadukt m
- Spanish: acueducto (es) m
- Sundanese: ᮏᮜᮔ᮪ ᮎᮄ (jalan cai)
- Swedish: akvedukt (sv) c
- Tamil: தொட்டிப் பாலம் (toṭṭip pālam), தொட்டிப்பாலம் (toṭṭippālam)
- Thai: สะพานส่งน้ำ (sà-paan-sòng-náam)
- Tibetan: ཆུ་ཡུར (chu yur), ཡུར་བ (yur ba)
- Turkish: su kemeri (tr)
- Ukrainian: акведу́к (uk) m (akvedúk)
- Volapük: kvaaduk
- Welsh: dyfrbont f, traphont ddŵr f
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a structure carrying water
- Asturian: acueductu m
- Bulgarian: акведу́кт m (akvedúkt)
- Catalan: aqüeducte (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 水道 (zh) (shuǐdào), 水路 (zh) (shuǐlù)
- Czech: akvadukt (cs) m
- Dutch: aquaduct (nl) n
- Finnish: akvedukti (fi)
- French: aqueduc (fr) m
- Galician: acueduto (gl) m
- German: Aquädukt (de) m
- Greek: υδραγωγείο (el) n (ydragogeío)
- Hebrew: אַמַּת מַיִם (he) f (amát máyim)
- Hungarian: akvedukt (hu), akvadukt (hu), csatornahíd (hu)
- Italian: acquedotto (it) m
- Japanese: 水道 (ja) (すいどう, suidō)
- Korean: 수도 (ko) (sudo), 수로 (ko) (suro)
- Latin: aquaeductus (la) m
- Latvian: ūdensvads m, akvedukts m
- Malay: akueduk
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: akvedukt (no) m
- Nynorsk: akvedukt m
- Old English: wætergelæt
- Polish: akwedukt (pl) m
- Portuguese: aqueduto (pt) m
- Romanian: apeduct (ro) n
- Russian: акведу́к (ru) m (akvedúk)
- Serbo-Croatian: akvèdukt (sh) m, akvadȕkt (sh) m, vodovod (sh)
- Spanish: acueducto (es) m
- Tibetan: ཆུ་ཡུར (chu yur), ཡུར་བ (yur ba), ཡུར་ཟམ (yur zam)
- Volapük: kvaaduk
- Welsh: pont cario dŵr, traphont
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anatomy: a structure conveying fluid, such as the cerebral aqueduct or vestibular aqueduct
References
- ^ Charles Harrington Elster (2005) “aqueduct AK-wi̱-duhkt”, in The Big Book of Beastly Mispronunciations: The Complete Opinionated Guide for the Careful Speaker, second edition, New York, N.Y.: Houghton Mifflin Company, →ISBN, page 36:
I wish I could state, as I did in the first edition of this book, that AK-wi̱-duhkt (AK- as in sack) is the only recognized pronunciation. Unfortunately, the editors of Encarta (2001) and NOA (2001) have been seduced by the popular, broad-a variant AH-kwuh-duhkt (AH- as in father), and they apparently were so taken with its pseudo-Latin charm that they didn’t merely list it; they listed it first. However, the latest editions of the other major current American dictionaries — WNW 4 (1999), American Heritage 4 (2000), RHWC (2001), and M-W 11 (2003) — continue to countenance only AK-kwi̱-duhkt, which has always been and still is the only cultivated pronunciation. / (In case you’re wondering, aqueduct begins with aque- instead of aqua- because it comes from the Latin aquae, the genitive of aqua, water.)