Dictionary Definition
rubbish
Noun
2 nonsensical talk or writing [syn: folderol, tripe, trumpery, trash, wish-wash,
applesauce, codswallop] v : attack
strongly
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
rubouses.Adjective
- In the context of "UK|colloquial": Exceedingly bad; awful; terrible; crap.
- This has been a rubbish day, and it's about to get worse: my mother-in-law is coming to stay.
Interjection
- In the context of "UK|colloquial": Expresses that something is
exceedingly bad, terrible or awful.
- The one day I actually practice my violin, the teacher cancels
the lesson.
- Aw, rubbish! Though at least this means you have time to play football...
- The one day I actually practice my violin, the teacher cancels
the lesson.
Noun
Synonyms
- see
Derived terms
Translations
Extensive Definition
Waste, is an unwanted or undesired material or
substance. It is also referred to as rubbish, trash, garbage, or
junk depending upon the type of material and the regional
terminology. In living organisms, waste relates to unwanted
substances or toxins that are expelled from them.
Waste
management is the human control of the collection, treatment
and disposal of different wastes. This is in order to reduce the
negative impacts waste has on environment and society.
Waste is directly linked to the human
development, both technologically and socially. The composition of
different wastes have varied over time and location. With
industrial development and innovation being directly linked to
waste materials. Examples of this include plastics and nuclear
technology. Some components of waste have economical value and can
be recycled once
correctly recovered.
Biodegradable
waste such as food waste or sewage, is broken down naturally by
microorganisms either aerobically or anaerobically. If the disposal
of biodegradable waste is not controlled it can cause a number of
wider problems including contributing to the release of greenhouse
gases and can impact upon human health via encouragement of
pathogens.
It is difficult to define specifically what a
waste is. Items that some people discard have value to others. It
is widely recognised that waste materials are a valuable resource,
whilst there is debate as to how this value is best realised.
Governments need to define what waste is in order that it can be
safely and legally managed. Different definitions need to be
combined in order to ensure the safe and legal disposal of the
waste.
Environmental impact
Many different types of waste have negative impacts upon the wider environment.Waste pollution is considered a serious threat by
many and can broadly be defined as any pollution associated with
waste and waste management practices. Typical materials that are
found in household waste which have specific environmental impacts
with them include biodegradable wastes, batteries, aerosols, oils,
acids and fluorescent tubes.
As a nation, Americans generate more waste than
any other nation in the world with 4.5 pounds of municipal solid
waste (MSW) per person per day, 55 percent of which is contributed
as residential garbage. The remaining 45 percent of waste in the
U.S.'s ‘waste stream' comes from manufacturing, retailing, and
commercial trade in the U.S. economy .
Biodegradable waste is of specific concern as
breaks down in landfills to form methane, a potent greenhouse gas.
If this gas is not prevented from entering the atmosphere, by
implication, it contributes to climate
change.
Littering can be
considered the most visible form of solid waste pollution. The act
of littering for the most part constitutes disposing of waste
inappropriately, typically in public places. Littering itself may
or may not be an intentional action.
Other forms of pollution associated with waste
materials include illegal dumping and leaching. Illegal dumping of
flytipping often involves unregulated disposal of materials on
private or public land. Remoted sites with road access coupled with
limited surveillance often provides the perfect opportunity for
this form of dumping which often goes unpunished and leaves others
(such as the community or developer) to properly dispose of the
waste.
Leaching is a process by which contaminants from
solid waste enter soil and often ground water systems contaminating
them.
Definitions
The European
Union defines waste as an object the holder discards, intends
to discard or is required to discard is waste under the Waste
Framework Directive (European Directive 75/442/EC as amended). Once
a substance or object has become waste, it will remain waste until
it has been fully recovered and no longer poses a potential threat
to the environment or to human health."'
The UK's Environmental Protection Act 1990
indicated waste includes any substance which constitutes a scrap material, an effluent or
other unwanted surplus arising from the application of any process
or any substance or article which requires to be disposed of which
has been broken, worn out, contaminated or otherwise spoiled; this
is supplemented with anything which is discarded otherwise dealt
with as if it were waste shall be presumed to be waste unless the
contrary is proved. This definition was amended by the Waste
Management Licensing Regulations 1994 defining waste as:
"any substance or object which the producer or
the person in possession of it, discards or intends or is required
to discard but with exception of anything excluded from the scope
of the Waste Directive".
Culture
There is a cultural dimension to waste. Wasting time, money, or food involves moral judgements that carry a great deal of weight in human interaction. Attitudes to this wastage differ between different societies.For example, food may be wasted in one part of
the world while there may be famine elsewhere. Chefs from a
particular culinary tradition may prize cuts of meat that chefs in
other traditions will dispose of. A parent may regard a child's
career in a rock band as a waste of their education, though this
opinion may not necessarily be shared by the child. The frivolous
expenditure of money may be described as "wasting money"
independently of the economic underpinning of the transactions
concerned.
References
External links
rubbish in Arabic: قمامة
rubbish in Guarani: Yty
rubbish in Aymara: T'una
rubbish in Bulgarian: Боклук
rubbish in Czech: Odpad
rubbish in Welsh: Sbwriel
rubbish in Danish: Affald
rubbish in German: Abfall
rubbish in Spanish: Basura
rubbish in Esperanto: Rubo
rubbish in Persian: زباله
rubbish in French: Déchet
rubbish in Galician: Lixo
rubbish in Korean: 쓰레기
rubbish in Croatian: Otpad
rubbish in Indonesian: Sampah
rubbish in Italian: Rifiuti
rubbish in Hebrew: פסולת
rubbish in Lombard: Rumenta
rubbish in Hungarian: Hulladék
rubbish in Dutch: Afval (vuilnis)
rubbish in Japanese: 廃棄物
rubbish in Norwegian: Avfall
rubbish in Norwegian Nynorsk: Søppel
rubbish in Polish: Odpady
rubbish in Portuguese: Resíduo
rubbish in Quechua: Q'upa
rubbish in Russian: Мусор
rubbish in Simple English: Waste
rubbish in Slovak: Odpad
rubbish in Slovenian: Odpadek
rubbish in Serbian: Отпад
rubbish in Serbo-Croatian: Otpad
rubbish in Finnish: Roska
rubbish in Swedish: Avfall
rubbish in Thai: ขยะมูลฝอย
rubbish in Turkish: Çöp
rubbish in Ukrainian: Відходи
rubbish in Venetian: Scoazse
rubbish in Yiddish: מיסט
rubbish in Contenese: 垃圾
rubbish in Chinese: 垃圾
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
absurdity, afterglow, afterimage, amphigory, attack, babble, babblement, bad-mouth,
balance, balderdash, baloney, bibble-babble, bilge, blabber, blather, bombast, bosh, bric-a-brac, bull, bullshit, bunk, bunkum, butt, butt end, candle ends,
castaway, castoff, cattle, chaff, chicken feed, chickenshit, clamjamfry, claptrap, clobber, crap, criticize, debris, derelict, destroy, details, detritus, discard, dogie, double-talk, dregs, dregs of society, drivel, drool, dross, dust, end, eyewash, fag end, fiddle-faddle,
fiddledeedee,
filings, flapdoodle, flotsam, flotsam and jetsam,
flummery, folderol, fossil, foundling, fragments, froth, fudge, fustian, gabble, galimatias, gammon, garbage, gibber, gibberish, gibble-gabble,
gimcrackery,
gobbledygook,
hocus-pocus, hogwash,
hokum, holdover, hooey, humbug, husks, jabber, jargon, jetsam, jump all over, jump on,
junk, kelter, knickknackery, lagan, leavings, lees, leftovers, litter, lumber, malarkey, minutiae, moonshine, mumbo jumbo,
narrishkeit,
niaiserie, nonsense, odds and ends,
offal, offscourings, offscum, orphan, orts, pack of nonsense, palaver, pan, pap, parings, peanuts, piffle, poppycock, prate, prattle, raff, rags, rant, refuse, reject, rejects, relics, remainder, remains, remnant, residue, residuum, rest, riffraff, rigamarole, rigmarole, roach, rodomontade, rot, rubble, ruins, rump, sawdust, scourings, scrap, scraps, scum, shadow, shavings, shoddy, skimble-skamble, slop, small beer, small change,
sordes, straw, stubble, stuff and nonsense,
stultiloquence,
stump, survival, sweepings, swinish multitude,
tommyrot, trace, trash, trifles, trivia, truck, trumpery, twaddle, twattle, twiddle-twaddle,
vaporing, vermin, vestige, waffling, waif, waifs and strays, waste, wastrel