English to Punjabi Dictionary percolate

percolate

ਵਿਕਸਤ
definition
verb
the water percolating through the soil may leach out minerals
(of a liquid or gas) filter gradually through a porous surface or substance.
he put some coffee on to percolate
(of coffee) be prepared in a percolator.
example
he put some coffee on to 'percolate'
The sand in the Marietta preserve overlies an ancient soil surface so hard and dense that water cannot 'percolate' through it.
So those could be living down the cracks underneath the surface but the gasses will still 'percolate' upwards.
They did badly, in part, because much of this growth did not 'percolate' into the rural areas.
Water would naturally 'percolate' through the rocks, and this would speed up the cooling of the pluton.
he put some coffee on to 'percolate'
Water will 'percolate' down through the soil/trash mixture and collect in the bottom.
Isn't it true there is no freedom of the press, without which good ideas do not 'percolate' well?
You also have a natural filtration process as the water will 'percolate' down through the ground and the ground will filter the water naturally.
These deposits represent enrichments of ore minerals caused by surface waters that 'percolate' downwards through an existing sulphide-rich orebody.
Inevitably ideas 'percolate' from one religion to another.
With water 'percolating' upwards hundreds of feet from its leaks it has created wetlands and damp areas in the upstate Ulster and Orange counties that endure even in the region's worst drought.
As an added precaution, I also constructed plastic-lined and rock-filled drainage ditches on the surface to prevent water from 'percolating' down from the surface.
It's a process of alteration of this ash as the water 'percolates' through.
The vast corpus of religious literature in regional languages which has not been adequately studied can provide interesting insights into how religious ideas 'percolated' into different strata of society.
He paused as he sniffed the air and glanced over at the coffee pot 'percolating' java on the counter.
In the not too distant future this will be estate agents’ recommended background music while the bread bakes and the coffee 'percolates' .
I looked over at the coffee pot, which had been done 'percolating' for a good fifteen minutes.
It promises to produce everything from the waft of freshly baked chocolate cookies to 'percolating' coffee over a personal computer.
The waiter duly brought the coffee which had obviously been 'percolating' away for about six months, freshly-brewed being a relative term.
Its summer melt area is increasing: fresh water's 'percolating' down to the base of the glaciers and lubricating the base and its ice shelves are becoming unstable.
Mars certainly has your brain 'percolating' with wild ideas and far-fetched fancies, but isn't it weird how nobody wants to know about anything out of the ordinary right now?
He added there was ‘a lot of skullduggery’ going on in relation to the inspection of trial holes and in many cases where 'percolation' was inadequate permissions were being granted.
He recently dug a trench that revealed high levels of magnesium and sulfur, suggesting water once 'percolated' through the soil and evaporated leaving salts.
Jamaican caves are formed by the 'percolation' , or flow, of the slightly acidic rainfall that twice a year pummels the soluble limestone in which the systems are found.
He complained that the planners' arguments in relation to septic tanks and lack of 'percolation' were nothing more than a ‘convenient’ means of refusing permission.
This, of course, is the sound of indie films, sometimes as if from the bottom of a well, rarely the crisp, 'percolating' coffee and microwave beep of a Hollywood kitchen.
The rover recently examined a rock named ‘Wishstone,’ which contains significant deposits of phosphorous that may have been left behind from water 'percolating' up through the Martian surface.
The hematite could have formed from iron-rich materials in the original layers of sediment, or it could have been deposited from iron-rich water 'percolating' through the sediments.
Over time, the saved water 'percolated' upward through capillary action toward plants' thirsty roots.
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