(1) Bangladesh, one of the most populous spots on earth, is virtually the delta of the Brahmaputra and Ganga river systems, where numerous streams and rivers debouch to the Bay of Bengal.(2) Water on the ground in Mr. Marcic's front garden is collected from the patio through metal grilles overlying gullies which run beside the house and debouch into his foul drainage.(3) Sediment-laden streams carve deep, steep-sided valleys which, where they debouch into adjacent lowlands, produce alluvial fans.(4) Secondly, we say that the body of water must eventually debouch into the sea.(5) The wetlands, which consist of riverbeds, alluvial flats, flood-plains, tributary debouchments and lakes, are home to rich vegetation and wildlife, including 228 species of birds.(6) He relied on 15 Panzer Division and the Reconnaissance Group around Azizia to break up any debouchment from the escarpment by British forces.(7) It stood almost on the bank of the river, where there was a bridge likewise called ÔÇÿTrionfaleÔÇÖ that debouched almost at the gate, the remains of which can be seen today in the middle of the Tiber.(8) It was as one crossed the frontier, debouching from the Khyber Pass, that one saw evidence of an altogether different lifestyle and the corruption that accompanies it.(9) When at last we debouched on the quayside below San Marco, Elizabeth turned to me with an air of satisfaction.(10) The ramped pedestrian street which links the classrooms debouches into a public square.(11) Spiralling down out of the mountains, we debouched out of a river valley and saw the great fortress rock rising sheer and white out of the ocean.(12) In 1830 Lander solved the vexed question of where the Niger debouched into the sea.(13) Two months earlier my journey had begun at Hardwar, the gateway to the Himalayas, where the Ganges debouches into the plains.(14) This fault system was the main conduit (at the current level of exposure) for upward moving hydrothermal fluids that debouched at the surface as hot springs and from which the cherts were precipitated.(15) The case concerned a public footpath running between two cottages before debouching onto a main road.(16) For 80 years the statue, erected after the first world war, has, with magnificent hauteur, turned his behind on the traffic that boils up where London's Park Lane debouches into Piccadilly and Knightsbridge.