Übersetzung für "landen" :

ch Deutsch en Englisch
1
landen
to end up
  • Verb
  • enden
2
landen
to land
  • Verb
3
länden
to land
  • Verb
  • vom Wasser ans Land bringen
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Worterklärung für " landen "
  • mit einem Wasserfahrzeug ans Land gelangen
  • aus der Luft wieder auf die Erde gelangen (meist mit einem Flugzeug)
  • Menschen oder Material an Land bringen
  • umgangssprachlich: an einen (nicht wünschen) Ort gelangen
  • umgangssprachlich: etwas zu Wege bringen, etwas schaffen

Beispiele für " landen "

    Beispiele für " land "
    • Most insects live on 'land'.
    • There are 50 acres of 'land' in this estate.
    • They come from a faraway 'land'.
    • Plant the potatoes in the 'land'.
    • He got an awful 'land' when the police arrived.
    • The plane is about to 'land'.
    • '1859' Easton, Alexander, A Practical Treatise on Street or Horse-Power Railways, p 108, "Rules adopted by the Sixth Avenue Railway, N. Y."':'
    • It can be tricky to 'land' a helicopter.
    • Use the net to 'land' the fish.
    • Japan er fallegt 'land'.
    • Ég bý úti á 'landi'.
    • Ég á þetta 'land' og allt sem er á því.
    • Ten years of drought had left the area a wasteland
    • After his experiences, he no longer found western Kansas such a wasteland
    • The 'lowland' region was prone to flooding during the rainy season.
    • The children built a 'fairyland' cottage out of gingerbread, decorated with gumdrops and peppermint sticks.
    • The candidate won by a 'landslide'.
    • The 'landless' younger sons of the gentry often entered the military as the only way to make a living.
    • The 'landless' flock to the cities seeking jobs.
    • a 'bland' oil
    • a 'bland' diet
    • the coffee was 'bland'
    • the judge found the defense's case to be 'bland'
    • We sailed 'landwards', hoping to get to shelter of the cove before the storm hit.
    • 'landed' gentry
    • The plane 'landed' at three o'clock.
    • He finally 'landed' a new job.
    • The 'landward' side of the fort faced more dangerous land guns than the otherwise which only faced what could be put on a ship.
    • The 'woodland' creatures ran from the fire.
    • a. used around a ship’s propeller shaft.
    • b. used around a tap, valve or faucet.
    • a 'glandular' disorder
    • It was in the 'heartland' of the French wine growing areas.
    • The home counties are the Conservative 'heartland'.
    • We made 'landfall' at the most god-forsaken, barren, desolate, and hellish location possible to image; and we were grateful, anything to get off that ship!
    • an 'island' of tranquility (a calm place surrounded by a noisy environment)
    • The 'landless' flock to the cities seeking jobs.
    • I had to remain 'landside' because I did not have a boarding card.
    • The software patent 'landscape' has changed considerably in the last years
    • "He gave credence to the long-standing impression that southern 'highlanders' were as a whole 'a hardy race of European dissenters' of very different stock from other southern colonists…. As backwoodsmen and 'highlanders', they opposed slavery formally, through abolitionist organizations, newspapers, or institutions of higher education…." (John C. Inscoe, Appalachians and Race: "Introduction" 1, 2001)
    • "Other essayists, however, detect significant distinctions between 'highlander' and lowlander—differences in racial attitudes (abolitionist or rabid racist), in the types of work that African Americans performed, and in the extent to which perceptions of whiteness shaped how outsiders understood the region and acted toward it." (John C. Inscoe, Appalachians and Race: "Introduction" 10, 2001)
    • Lighthouses are usually the first aids seen when making 'landfall'.