What is another word for riparian?

Pronunciation: [ɹɪpˈe͡əɹi͡ən] (IPA)

Riparian is a term used to describe land or habitats that are located next to a body of water. There are many synonyms for this word that can be used to describe similar habitats and environments. Some of the most common synonyms for riparian include streamside, riverine, waterside, and bankside. These are all words that refer to areas that are adjacent to water and are characterized by unique plant and animal communities. Other synonyms for riparian may include waterfront, floodplain, marshy, boggy, and wetland. All of these words emphasize the importance of water as a defining feature of the landscape and the habitats that rely on it.

What are the paraphrases for Riparian?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
Paraphrases are highlighted according to their relevancy:
- highest relevancy
- medium relevancy
- lowest relevancy

What are the hypernyms for Riparian?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Riparian

The Escambia River has a sand-gravel bottom, extensive sandy banks, a moderately-rapid current, and is flanked by a thick riparian forest.
"Description of a New Softshell Turtle From the Southeastern United States"
Robert G. Webb
The contention put forward more or less officially by Austria, that if this right were conceded to Roumania the other riparian Powers might claim the same privilege, is answered by the simple statement that such right is theirs already, as much as it is the right of Austria to control the navigation of the Danube at Pesth or Vienna, of Germany to regulate that of the Rhine at Cologne, or Belgium at Rotterdam.
"Roumania Past and Present"
James Samuelson
5. riparian owner to remove obstructions unless maintained for twenty years.
"Boating"
W. B. Woodgate Commentator: Harvey Mason

Famous quotes with Riparian

  • The most sensational of all the sick literary lives was that of Maupassant, who died mad at forty-three and whose hatred of God, man and nature - manifested in literary productions which give us immense pleasure: how is that to be explained? - spring from a kind of mother fixation as well as a terror of the cold. He was a bull of a man much given to boats and riparian dalliance, but he had bad circulation. He had other things too, including a Chinese-style priapism which enabled him to copulate, usually in public, six times in a row, the secret being his failure to detumesce. This, of course, like acne and the common cold, can be a symptom of tertiary syphilis, which Maupassant certainly had.
    Anthony Burgess

Related words: riparian habitats, riparian habitat, riparian area, riparian zones, river habitat

Related questions:

  • What is riparian habitat?
  • What are the types of riparian habitat?
  • Where do animals live in a riparian habitat?
  • What animals live in a riparian habitat?
  • Word of the Day

    captivators
    Antonyms of captivators are the words that represent the opposite meaning of captivators. The term captivators mean someone or something that attracts or holds attention. Antonyms ...