yaya kaldırımı sidewalk, brit

listen to the pronunciation of yaya kaldırımı sidewalk, brit
Турецкий язык - Английский Язык
pavement
A paved footpath at the side of a road
{n} a paved way, a stone or brick floor
Any paved exterior surface, as with a road or sidewalk
The interior flooring, especially when of stone, of large buildings such as a cathedral
To furnish with a pavement; to pave
the paved surface of a thoroughfare
A pavement is a path with a hard surface, usually by the side of a road. He was hurrying along the pavement
Road structure - includes road surface and underlying structural layers
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{i} paving, asphalt covering; sidewalk (British)
walk consisting of a paved area for pedestrians; usually beside a street or roadway
That with which anythingis paved; a floor or covering of solid material, laid so as to make a hard and convenient surface for travel; a paved road or sidewalk; a decorative interior floor of tiles or colored bricks
The material with which a surface is paved
rock exposed at the Earth's surface in the form of a more or less horizontal surface, usually with crevices or joints
means the portion of a street surfaced for vehicular or pedestrian movement
material used to pave an area
The pavement is the hard surface of a road. Durable surfacing of a road, path, court, patio, plaza, airstrip, or other such area. The Romans, the greatest road builders of the ancient world, built their roads of stone and concrete. By AD 75 several methods of road construction were known in India, including brick and stone slab pavements, and street paving was common in towns. Smaller cobblestones began to be used for European paving in the late Middle Ages. The 18th-19th century saw the development of pavement systems (e.g., macadam) that used light road surfaces of broken or crushed stone. Modern flexible pavements contain sand and gravel or crushed stone compacted with a bituminous binder (e.g., asphalt or tar); such a pavement has enough plasticity to absorb shock. Rigid pavements are made of concrete, composed of coarse and fine aggregate and portland cement, and usually reinforced with steel rod or mesh
A rock surface, often eroded or striated, which underlies glacial till and is exposed in sufficient quantity to resemble a sidewalk or open plaza