billabongs in English

noun
1
a branch of a river forming a backwater or stagnant pool, made by water flowing from the main stream during a flood.
The water level in the billabong was high, too high for fishing, said the old ladies.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "billabongs" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "billabongs", or refer to the context using the word "billabongs" in the English Dictionary.

1. The princpal Billabongs are: Bolin Bolin Billabongs (a dual formation) Banyule Billabong

2. Billabongs - find the meaning, anagrams and hook words with Billabongs and much more

3. Find another word for Billabongs

4. What are synonyms for Billabongs?

5. The Billabongs, East Maitland, NSW

6. Billabongs Family Restaurant East Maitland Menu - View the Menu for Billabongs Family Restaurant East Maitland on Zomato for Delivery, Dine-out or Takeaway, Billabongs Family Restaurant menu and prices

7. Synonyms for Billabongs in Free Thesaurus

8. Billabongs: a small often deep body of water.

9. Billabongs is playable in: Words With Friends 21

10. Today's crossword puzzle clue is a quick one: Billabongs

11. Here are the possible solutions for "Billabongs" clue

12. The Billabongs, East Maitland: See 182 unbiased reviews of The Billabongs, rated 4 of 5 on Tripadvisor and ranked #8 of 59 restaurants in East Maitland.

13. Our Billabongs & natural pools, are designed to do the same

14. Ponds & Billabongs specialises in natural pond construction and artificial rock creation.

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16. ‘The bunyip lives in creeks, swamps, and Billabongs and has a loud, bellowing cry.’ ‘The little fish were trapped in Billabongs, which were drying out.’ ‘He was cleaning weeds out of Billabongs up in the Northern Territory when he was a teenager.’ ‘Up jumped the swagman, leapt into the billabong,’

17. Rivers form “Billabongs” when a river reroutes and leaves behind an oxbow lake

18. The team at Eco Billabongs live and breathe all things natural pools & ponds

19. Traditionally, Billabongs were not owned, but cared for by all who who used them

20. 5 synonyms of Billabongs from the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus, plus 7 related words, definitions, and antonyms

21. The word Billabongs uses 10 letters: a, b, b, g, i, l, l, n, o, s

22. The Billabongs is an award winner restaurant catering for the whole family, with family friendly price

23. Ponds and Billabongs is a niche landscaping business specialising in creating natural water features and artificial rock boulders

24. Tropical Billabongs, deceptively still and quiet, form perfect havens for thousands of native species to nest, feed and breed

25. Billabongs can also be formed when a pool of water is left behind when flood or tidal waters recede

26. The Billabongs themselves are of interest to see the unique landscape of lush green trees, grasses, lilies and water lilies

27. NAME Bunyip’s name comes from the mythical cryptid from Australian folklore said to lurk in billabongs, rivers & swamps

28. Freshwater Billabongs and associated Indigenous cultural knowledge are under significant threat from environmental, social, economic and political pressures in this region

29. At the time of European settlement Araluen was described as a broad alluvial valley with many natural billabongs covered with water lilies.

30. The Bunyip, or kianpraty, is a large mythical creature from Aboriginal mythology, said to lurk in swamps, billabongs, creeks, riverbeds, and waterholes

31. Bunyips and Billabongs: An Unveiled Academy Novel (Penny and Boots Book 4) Amy Hopkins 4.7 out of 5 stars (26) Kindle Edition

32. The Billabongs Estate, a gated community, boasts security swipe remote gated entry similar to award winning eco development by Michael Myers, Sunrise at 1770

33. At the time of writing (April 2015), all Billabongs except the Bolin Bolin are completely dry, due to the extended low rainfall period.

34. Focused primarily in woodland and water dense areas such as river systems and billabongs, the pied Butcherbird is carnivorous living off a wide

35. The SSB is now operationalising this monitoring method in Kakadu’s Billabongs, and is already achieving high model accuracy using AI to identify fish to species level from video

36. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples understand the value of Billabongs and utilise the life cycles of certain species of plants and animals that are part of billabong ecosystems

37. Penny and Boots Complete Series Omnibus: An Unveiled Academy Novel - Snakes and Shadows, Werewolves and Wendigo, Pixels and Poltergeists, Bunyips and Billabongs - Kindle edition by Hopkins, Amy, Anderle, Michael

38. The enormous biomass of littoral and fringing vegetation could contribute to metazoan food webs in these Billabongs only if an additional highly 13 C-depleted source was consumed simultaneously

39. Billabong, located at Tampa Premium Outlets®: Billabongs premiere surf lifestyle store for young men and women.In addition to the Billabong brand name, the store carries RVCA, VonZipper, Sector9, GoPro, Nixon and Stance.

40. The name Bunyip is translated as ‘Devil’ or ‘Spirit’ and the beast has most commonly been described as some kind of lake monster said to dwell in things such as billabongs and swamps.

41. Billabongs typically occur at the confluence of two smaller channels, but are unique because they do not reach their maximum width/depth ratio until much further downstream, and then a short distance later, the channel abruptly terminates.

42. The Bunyip is a mythical creature from Australian mythology.It is said to live in swamps, billabongs, creeks, riverbeds, and waterholes.The Bunyip is found in traditional aboriginal beliefs and stories from many parts of Australia, although it is called by several different names in different language groups

43. The Bunyip is a mythical creature — a lake monster — from Australian folklore; the word itself means “devil” or “spirit.” According to Aboriginal legend, the bloodthirsty Bunyip inhabited swamps, riverbeds, billabongs (the stagnant backwaters of a river), and even wells, and lay in wait at night to devour any animal or person lurking nearby — although it was said to have