0 past simple and past participle of dredge
1 to remove unwanted things from the bottom of a river, lake, etc. using a boat or special device:
We report geochemical data for a new suite of samples dredged from the volcano.
None of the dredged samples are similar to the pumice products of the 1962 eruption of the shoal.
When people speak, they mainly express propositions dredged up from memory or generated creatively by recombining elements from different memories.
The permitted materials include dredged material, sewage sludge, industrial fishprocessing waste, offshore man-made structures at sea, organic material of natural origin, and bulky items made of iron, steel, or concrete.
An average of 38 million tonnes of controlled wastes, excluding sewage sludge and dredged spoils, are estimated to be recycled annually.
There are two types of dredging — dredging for navigational purposes and commercial dredging, in which aggregates are dredged by private companies.
This provision is required so that the dredged approach channel may be extended, lighted, buoyed and subject to the harbour master's jurisdiction.
Those exemptions include waste dredged from ports, and the burial of domestic pets at pet cemeteries.