a'a
See also: Appendix:Variations of "aa"
English
Noun
a'a (uncountable)
- Alternative form of aa
- 1883, Clarence E. Dutton, Fourth Annual report of the United States Geological Survey:
- The second form of the lavas is called by the natives a-a, and its contrast with pahoehoe is about the greatest imaginable. It consists mainly of clinkers sometimes detached, sometimes partially agglutinated together with a bristling array of sharp, jagged, angular fragments.
- 1999, A. Ganeri, Violent Volcanoes:
- A'a is thick, sticky lava which forms jagged, chunky rock when it cools.
- 2004, Richard Fortey, The Earth, Folio Society, published 2011, page 44:
- I overheard a geologist say that a good pair of boots can be rasped to bits on a‘a in a couple of months.
- 1883, Clarence E. Dutton, Fourth Annual report of the United States Geological Survey:
Digo
Particle
a'a
- noHamisi akaphia kare Mombasa? — A'a, kadzangbwephiya.
- Has Hamisi already gone to Mombasa? — No, he hasn't gone yet.
References
- Joseph Mwalonya, Alison Nicolle, Steve Nicolle, Juma Zimbu, Mgombato. Digo-English-Swahili Dictionary (2005), page 1
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