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Sewerage   /sˈuərɪdʒ/   Listen
noun
Sewerage  n.  
1.
The construction of a sewer or sewers.
2.
The system of sewers in a city, town, etc.; the general drainage of a city or town by means of sewers.
3.
The material collected in, and discharged by, sewers. (In this sense sewage is preferable and common)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sewerage" Quotes from Famous Books



... harbor fully seven feet, could not raise what little we want a bit higher. Don't look at it so suspiciously," he added. "I know that Boston Harbor water was far from being clean enough for bathing in your day, but all that is changed. Your sewerage systems, remember, are forgotten abominations, and nothing that can defile is allowed to reach sea or river nowadays. For that reason we can and do use sea water, not only for all the public baths, but ...
— Equality • Edward Bellamy

... Twenty-five years ago they were often taken in nets in the Parramatta River, near Sydney, and were very plentiful in Sydney Harbour itself. Nowadays one is rarely caught anywhere inside the Heads. Steamboat traffic and the foul water resulting from sewerage has driven them to the deep waters of the ocean. One peculiar feature of schnapper fishing on the northern coast of New South Wales is that, be the fish ever so plentiful and hungry, they invariably cease biting immediately, ...
— Ridan The Devil And Other Stories - 1899 • Louis Becke

... for the purpose of erecting a church on the site: this, although the narrowness and crookedness of the streets, as well as their foul and miasmatic condition owing to the lack of all paving and sewerage, were the constant ...
— Paris from the Earliest Period to the Present Day; Volume 1 • William Walton

... The principal duties are (1) the collection of municipal and state taxes, (2) the establishment and care of public schools, (3) the administration of justice, (4) police supervision, (5) the support of a fire department, (6) the care of the streets, (7) of street gas and electric lighting, (8) of sewerage, (9) of the water supply, (10) of public parks, (11) of sanitation and public health, (12) of prisons, (13) the supervision of the liquor traffic, (14) the regulation of street railways, (15) the enforcement of building regulations, ...
— Government and Administration of the United States • Westel W. Willoughby and William F. Willoughby

... common sources of loss in nitrogen are, first, through the leeching of nitrates into the drainage water; second, through oxidation; third, through the use of explosives in war; and fourth, through the waste of the sewerage of cities. When plant and animal products are changed into soluble nitrates, they are usually soon lost to the soil, unless taken up by the roots of plants. When vegetable matter on or near the surface ...
— Clovers and How to Grow Them • Thomas Shaw


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