faulted in English
her colleagues and superiors could not fault her dedication to the job
rift valleys where the crust has been stretched and faulted
Use "faulted" in a sentence
1. Looks like something faulted during the power outage.
2. Laurus cannot be faulted for a dog turned to madness.
3. The volcanic rocks are faulted and tilted, locally altered, and largely postorogenic.
4. The acrobat deliberately faulted the performance once to make it look difficult.
5. 15 The sedimentary rocks, with their coal seams, have been folded and faulted.
6. The sedimentary rocks, with their coal seams, have been folded and faulted.
7. Coal and oil shale occur alternatively and cyclically in the Paleogene Huangxian faulted Basin.
8. Extensive stretching of the crust above these granite intrusions produces a faulted terrain with active volcanoes.
9. The basalt slivers maintained a near-horizontal attitude while adjacent sedimentary rocks were folded and faulted.
10. The movement of the plates creates strain which is then accumulated in faulted areas causing earthquakes.
11. True, he could be faulted when he turned to “declaring his own soul righteous rather than God.”
12. A succession of rock beds that have been moved comparatively little from their original site of formation, although they may be folded and faulted Explanation of Autochthone
13. This is the formula for a thick vertically faulted slab with such a large throw that the downthrow side makes no contribution to the gravitational force.
14. Production values which cannot be faulted, it looks great, the home of The Bantlings is very well known and frequently pops up in TV dramas, it's an amazing house
15. Thể thao & Văn hóa agreed; they found Chi Pu's singing "acceptable" but faulted Trang Pháp's "clumsy" translation for being one of the main factors that failed the song as a whole.
16. Autochthon [ȯ′täk·thən] (geology) A succession of rock beds that have been moved comparatively little from their original site of formation, although they may be folded and faulted extensively
17. Autochthon [ȯ′täk·thən] (geology) A succession of rock beds that have been moved comparatively little from their original site of formation, although they may be folded and faulted extensively
18. The accumulated sediments in the karstic caverns derive from the periodic inwashing of the insoluble residues built up on the surface of erosion, were indurated after the sealing of the karstic openings with calcareous muds during the Ordovician transgression, and were faulted with their cover when the Saguenay graben formed.