0 a kind of tall, stiff grass growing on wet or marshy ground -- sejenis rumput
reeds along a riverbank.
1 a thin piece of cane or metal in certain wind instruments (eg the oboe, clarinet) which vibrates and makes a sound when the instrument is played -- sejenis alat muzik
Furthermore, the reeds themselves can take up a proportion of the waste, including metals, and aquatic plants are being used to extract and recover precious metals from waste waters.
If he will not do this, will he at least explain why there reeds to be secrecy over such an important matter?
The manufacture of these reeds takes place in my constituency, by highly skilled persons who are very anxious to retain this export trade.
They were cultivating this land which had never grown anything but reeds before, and they were producing their own rice.
He could tell us about the optimum wind pressures for chorus reeds or the composition of mixtures.
Elementary education is essentially a preparatory education, and ought to be organised with regard for the growing reeds of the child.
Our clumsy novices play their part in creating isolationists by talk which allows them to misrepresent us by calling us broken reeds and ingrates.
The huts were constructed of corrugated iron, bamboo and woven reeds, and would have been quite inadequate to keep out a really heavy rainfall.