If you look this word up in a dictionary, it will give the origin of this word which comes from the Greek. It means to be dried up. I think that is goes back to a long time ago when bodies were buried and decayed and what was left over after period of time was "dried" up bones. Now the word also means a framework as in the framework that is built before a home is finished.
They've been there long before the white settlers ever came to Canada, and likely even before the Native Americans showed up.
It wakes up like us, when ever it feels like it. Isn't it obvious?
Yes, if you classify grass as a consumer of the sun's energy. and if your wondering they eat hay which is alive but just dried up
Arapaima fish are native to the Amazon River basin in South America, primarily found in freshwater habitats such as rivers, lakes, and flooded forests. They are known for their massive size and can grow up to 10 feet in length.
2012
The Aral Sea, before most of it dried up.
5 days
mummy
Yes
Bring it down from where ever I have it up.
The archaic word for dried up or withered is "adust."
the nile has never dried up its only flooded because of a earthquake and it used to flood every year but since they put the aswan dam in it has not flooded every year
this was my question, who will answer it ?
If the water dried up, ther is a high possibility of dying of thirst.
NO. Individual molecules of the water may get there as rain after a LONG journey.
its not- actually it is, because it is dried, dead animals and plants from hundreds of years ago. how were they dried up I hear you ask, well they are dried up by the sun.