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The plural form of the word "stream" is simply "streams."
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The word stream is both a noun (stream, streams) and a verb (stream, streams, streaming, streamed).The noun stream functions as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.The verb stream functions as the action of a subject.Examples:The stream felt cool and soothing to our tired feet. (noun, subject of the sentence)We watched the parade stream down the street to the bandstand in the park. (verb, action of the noun parade)
rivulets is the plural form of the word "rivulet," which means "small stream." So, stream would work as a synonym.
The boys enjoy fishing in the lakes and streams in Northern Wisconsin. The teacher's joke was met with streams of laughter. After the water streams through the pipes, it flows into the sink.
I know of no special name for southerly flowing streams. 'Draining in a southerly direction' would perhaps be a description.
No. Stream up is not a compound word.
He carried the knapsack up the mountain. This is a sample sentence using the word knapsack.
Kill is dutch word for stream. Much of New York originally settled by dutch, a lot of streams....therefore a lot of towns ending in kill
It is an Italian word from the Neapolitan Area meaning torrent or stream. Taken from Latin 'lavare' meaning to wash and also used in the sense of flash floods and heavy rain, also streams of molten rock from Vesuvius.
'Strom' is an anglicized form of the Swedish word 'ström' (pronounced similarly to the English word 'strum'), which means 'stream' or 'brook'. It is a common element in many Swedish last names, and thus was carried over in many American last names as well.
The sentence with the word 'alluvial': Alluvial soil is formed by the deposition of clay, silt and gravel carried by the rushing water stream which is deposited in the plains where the stream slows.