English language

How to pronounce cwm in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms cirque, corrie
Type of basin

Examples of cwm

cwm
Worried about the proposal to increase the capacity of the CWM Chemical Services'landfill in Lewiston?
From the buffalonews.com
Cwm, a forward-chaining reasoner which can be used for querying, checking, transforming and filtering information.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Opposite is the cwm of the Nant Milwyn, at the head of which is the small but distinctive hill of Domen Milwyn.
From the en.wikipedia.org
I created an internal link to PEO in my CWM article.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Will slim-down at CWM add strength?
From the buffalonews.com
To the right of Everest, at the head of the western cwm, is Lhotse, the fourth-highest mountain in the world, that rises up from the south col.
From the guardian.co.uk
By using 6 inches of clay instead of 2 feet, CWM could increase the landfill's waste capacity by about 3 percent, or 106,870 cubic yards, without enlarging its surface area or height.
From the buffalonews.com
A view of Cwmystwyth looking across the only significant flat area of the cwm to be found before the river reaches maturity near Trawsgoed some 6 miles further west.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Cwm Gwerin eastwardly is lonelier and finer still, one wall scoured to bare rock by glaciation, a castellated ridge on the other towering above the Afon Hengwm that drains peatlands towards Dylife.
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
  • Cirque: a steep-walled semicircular basin in a mountain; may contain a lake
  • A valley head created through glacial erosion and with a shape similar to an amphitheatre
  • Common Warehouse Metamodel Specification
  • (pronounced coom) A valley on the side of a hill or mountain.
  • Area enclosed by a cirque. Pronounced coom.
  • The CWM is a scheduled meeting with the Homeowner to introduce their assigned Field Manager. The homeowner is educated on the construction process and expectations are set. Options and schedules are reviewed as well as lot orientation, set-backs, utility placement, easements, etc.
  • A large depression in a mountain side, usually with a steep back wall and often with a tarn in the bottom (Wales)