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detritus
[dih-trahy-tuhs]
noun
rock in small particles or other material worn or broken away from a mass, as by the action of water or glacial ice.
any disintegrated material; debris.
detritus
/ dɪˈtraɪtəs /
noun
a loose mass of stones, silt, etc, worn away from rocks
an accumulation of disintegrated material or debris
the organic debris formed from the decay of organisms
detritus
Loose fragments, such as sand or gravel, that have been worn away from rock.
Matter produced by the decay or disintegration of an organic substance.
Other Word Forms
- detrital adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of detritus1
Example Sentences
A picture of an exhausted Sue, sat post-concert among the detritus left on the Wembley turf, captures the moment perfectly.
Photos show the eerie aftermath: the bunk beds mud-caked and toppled, the detritus of a summer camp cut tragically short.
I met him a couple of years ago at my local Home Depot, and have hired him a few times to haul away household detritus.
To keep things clean, there’s a wooden broom he can sweep out leaves and other detritus.
“When the productivity of the surface water changes, that affects the amount of detritus, or dead material, that sinks to the deep sea floor that is the food supply for those organisms,” Drazen said.
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