The trenches on the western front were built in a more or less continuous line from the North Sea all the way to the border of Switzerland. A distance of about 750 km; considering that both sides used multiple trench lines, plush support trenches, and zigzags across the landscape there would have been several thousand kilometres of trenches being used by either side at any given time.
It meant that the Germans were eating choclate covered strawberries in their trenches.
The past simple tense is meant.(pronounced ment)The present perfect tense is have/hasmeant, and the past perfect tense is had meant.The past progressive tense is was meaning / were meaning.The past perfect progressive is had been meaning.
coninental trenches are trenches that go across countries...i think
Trenches are caused by plate movement.
A trench is a contour in the ground; it is made of space.
A contour refers to an outline that represents the form or shape of something.
For the present continuous form "is meaning" or "are meaning," the past continuous form are "was meaning" and "were meaning."(For the verb to mean, the simple past tense is meant.)
Continuous, constantly
non stop
Synonyms for continuous include constant, unending, perpetual, uninterrupted.
Isobar for atmospheric pressure, isotherm for temperature, or contour for height above (below) sea level.
blind contour, countour, gesture, continuous line, mass gesture, reductive, parallel hatching and cross hatching
WWI Trenches versus Water/Mud Although many if not most of the trenches of WWI were plagued with standing water and mud, not all were. Where the contour of the ground allowed, the bottom elevation of the trenches would be sloped to a point where the trench opened to lower ground, allowing enough drainage to greatly reduce or eliminate standing water. Although an improvement, it did not prevent the trench bottoms from being a quagmire of mud during rainy periods.
Trenchless technology is used in construction and civil engineering. It is a type of subsurface construction work that requires few or no continuous trenches.
Contour lines do not always need to be joined. While in topographic maps they are typically continuous and closed loops to represent elevation, in some cases they may be broken or interrupted to indicate a depression or a cliff. However, for clarity and to accurately represent the topography, contour lines are usually connected and form a continuous line.
Contour lines below the sea show depth levels using lines that connect points of equal depth. The lines are closer together in steep areas and farther apart in flat areas. They help visualize the underwater topography and identify submarine features like trenches, ridges, and seamounts.