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Zane

The word lake

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The word lake comes from Middle English lake (“lake, pond, waterway”), from Old English lacu (“pond, pool, stream”), from Proto-Germanic *lakō (“pond, ditch, slow moving stream”), from the Proto-Indo-European root *leǵ- (“to leak, drain”). Cognates include Dutch laak (“lake, pond, ditch”), Middle Low German lāke (“water pooled in a riverbed, puddle”) as in: de:Wolfslake, de:Butterlake, German Lache (“pool, puddle”), and Icelandic lækur (“slow flowing stream”). Also related are the English words leak and leach.

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There is considerable uncertainty about defining the difference between lakes and ponds, and no current internationally accepted definition of either term across scientific disciplines or political boundaries exists.[3] For example, limnologists have defined lakes as water bodies which are simply a larger version of a pond, which can have wave action on the shoreline or where wind-induced turbulence plays a major role in mixing the water column. None of these definitions completely excludes ponds and all are difficult to measure. For this reason, simple size-based definitions are increasingly used to separate ponds and lakes. Definitions for lake range in minimum sizes for a body of water from 2 hectares (5 acres)[4]:331[5] to 8 hectares (20 acres)[6] (see also the definition of “pond”). Charles Elton, one of the founders of ecology, regarded lakes as waterbodies of 40 hectares (99 acres) or more.[7] The term lake is also used to describe a feature such as Lake Eyre, which is a dry basin most of the time but may become filled under seasonal conditions of heavy rainfall. In common usage, many lakes bear names ending with the word pond, and a lesser number of names ending with lake are in quasi-technical fact, ponds. One textbook illustrates this point with the following: “In Newfoundland, for example, almost every lake is called a pond, whereas in Wisconsin, almost every pond is called a lake.”[8]

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