See also: qanāt

English edit

 
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Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Classical Persian قنات (qanāt), from Arabic قَنَاة (qanāh).

Noun edit

qanat (plural qanats)

  1. An underground conduit, between vertical shafts, that leads water from the interior of a hill to villages in the valley
    • 1981, Richard Edward Chapman, Geology and Water: An Introduction to Fluid Mechanics for Geologists, page 112:
      Shafts are dug to the required level along the planned route of the qanat, every 300 m or so [] .
    • 1988, Keith Stanley McLachlan, The Neglected Garden: The Politics and Ecology of Agriculture in Iran:
      Elsewhere over large areas of the plateau and the foothill regions, the qanat irrigation cultures were weakened considerably.
    • 2019, Tim Mackintosh-Smith, Arabs, Yale University Press, page 127:
      Its gardens are watered by rivers that invariably flow underground, like the subterranean qanats developed by the Persians.

Synonyms edit

References edit

  • For a schematic of a qanat, refer to Geology and Water: An Introduction to Fluid Mechanics for Geologists, by Richard Edward Chapman, 1981, page 112.

Crimean Tatar edit

Noun edit

qanat

  1. wing

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

References edit

Tatar edit

Noun edit

qanat

  1. wing