A deep ditch is a long, narrow excavation in the ground that is significantly deeper than it is wide. It is often used for drainage, irrigation, or as a boundary marker. Deep ditches can also serve as trenches for utility lines or for erosion control in landscaping. The depth and design can vary based on its intended purpose and the surrounding environment.
A deep ditch carved over time by running water is called a ravine.
The men dug a deep ditch to lay pipes for the new septic tank. I fell in the ditch, but luckily it was dry.
It varies, but it is usually 50 feet deep in most places.
A long, narrow deep ditch.
A canion.
A trench is a deep ditch sometimes surrounding a fortification.
Another word for a deep ditch that is dug around a castle is a moat. You could call it a trench, or you could fill it full of water and call it a moat.
It is called a moat
Get out and hide in a nearby ditch deep enough so you can hide in it.
It's a gully. Rills are smaller ditches cut by running water, but can be plowed over. Once the ditch is so deep it can't be plowed over, it's a gully.
the think walls protected the ditch in aurangzebs time because the walls were thick and the ditch ( pit ) was deep. this protected the ditch : as if the aurangzebs come from the ditch, they would fall down and if they came from the other side, the soldiers would see them from the bastions. I know this because i have the book of history and it has the chapter of aurangzeb. good luck .
7.7 hours