Sunapee is a town and place located in Grafton County, New Hampshire, in the northeastern United States. It is also the name of a lake in the same area, as well as an artificial pond created from the Great Bay Mettawee River by a small hydroelectric power station in Sunapee, New Hampshire.
/ˈsʌnəpiː/
To make someone a citizen of a country to which they did not previously belong, usually by legal means or along with a process of assimilation into a new culture and society.
/ˈnætʃəraɪzl/
Not having a small opening or hole, especially through which a plant grows or through which a passage is made.
/ʌnˈæp.ə.tʃəd/
The prothallus is a small, heart-shaped, often green spore-bearing structure that develops from a spore and serves as the gametophyte stage of the life cycle of a fern or moss. It is typically very small and flat.
/ˈprɔθələs/
An obsolete term sometimes used in physics or technology to refer to the phenomenon where a disturbance or wave propagates below the surface of a medium, often used in the context of infrasound, which is sound waves with a frequency below the lower limit of human hearing, typically below 20 Hz.
/ɪnˈfra.pəуз/
In grammar, locants are numerals or other numbers that indicate the position (especially numerical order) of other elements within a sentence or expression, such as the locant '1', '2', or 'next' used to denote an adjective's relation to a noun or a pronoun.
/ˈləʊkənt/
To trade more with another country, region, or company than they trade with you, often implying a competitive advantage in terms of exports or sales.
/aʊˈtrneɪ/
Being fair, sensible, and practical; not unreasonable or extreme; can also refer to the ability to reason or think clearly about something or someone.
/ˈrəʊznəbl/
A word that sounds like the thing it represents; a verbal onomatopoeia. For instance, 'clang', 'buzz', and 'tick-tock' are all picturedromes because their sounds echo the sounds they represent.
/ˈpaɪktədrəm/