english term: a period when river water level becomes low

Forum for English and all other languages.

Moderators: kokoyaya, Beaumont

Post Reply
User avatar
sara
Membre / Member
Posts: 15
Joined: 01 Jul 2003 17:33

english term: a period when river water level becomes low

Post by sara »

Hi All,

I would like to know the english term for "a period, usually summer months, when the water level in rivers becomes very low".

Thanks in advance.
User avatar
kokoyaya
Admin
Posts: 31645
Joined: 10 Oct 2002 14:12
Location: Moissac (82)
Contact:

Post by kokoyaya »

drought?
User avatar
Maïwenn
Modératrice Arts & Litté.
Posts: 17572
Joined: 14 Nov 2003 17:36
Location: O Breiz ma bro
Contact:

Post by Maïwenn »

I don't think this is what you're looking for, but it may help

low water refers to the lowest water level in a river (in average)

"étiage" in French
Penn ar Bed
The end of the land
Le commencement d'un monde
User avatar
sara
Membre / Member
Posts: 15
Joined: 01 Jul 2003 17:33

Post by sara »

Thanks Koko and Mai! :)

I think low water (étiage) is more appropriate in this situation.
User avatar
sara
Membre / Member
Posts: 15
Joined: 01 Jul 2003 17:33

english term: when marsh water enters a river

Post by sara »

I am looking for the appropriate word to describe "the period when marsh water enters rivers, lakes, and oceans."
It can be during rainy seasons, or when snow melts.

Thanks.
User avatar
Maïwenn
Modératrice Arts & Litté.
Posts: 17572
Joined: 14 Nov 2003 17:36
Location: O Breiz ma bro
Contact:

Post by Maïwenn »

I know the word in Breton but not in English. :( Neither in French actually ! I think we need someone from the mountains here ;)
Penn ar Bed
The end of the land
Le commencement d'un monde
garion
Guest

Post by garion »

are you looking for "run-off"
User avatar
Pierre
Membre / Member
Posts: 597
Joined: 25 Sep 2004 20:15
Location: Bruxelles

Post by Pierre »

Maïwenn wrote:I don't think this is what you're looking for, but it may help

low water refers to the lowest water level in a river (in average)

"étiage" in French
:hello:
étiage is indeed the exact word in French.
I asked altavista to look to occurences of this word in Canada, a country where both languages are official in the hope to find documents containing étiage and available in both versions.
I found in English:
low-water like Maïwenn
low stage

On the other side, I do not agree with the suggestion of Invité/guest garion (run-off).
The matches for run-off or run off are related to escaping water (French ruissellement)
:hello:
π R
garion
Guest

marsh water

Post by garion »

Pierre is right I dont think run-off is what you want. I dont know if this is either but "river mouth" refers to where a river either starts or ends, hope this helps.
User avatar
Raskolnikov
Membre / Member
Posts: 39
Joined: 19 Sep 2004 07:52
Location: Los Angeles, California

Re: english term: when marsh water enters a river

Post by Raskolnikov »

sara wrote:I am looking for the appropriate word to describe "the period when marsh water enters rivers, lakes, and oceans."
It can be during rainy seasons, or when snow melts.

Thanks.
Perhaps "high water" (not "high-water" :D) "high tide" or "monsoon".



.
Last edited by Raskolnikov on 25 Oct 2004 01:26, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
Raskolnikov
Membre / Member
Posts: 39
Joined: 19 Sep 2004 07:52
Location: Los Angeles, California

Re: marsh water

Post by Raskolnikov »

garion wrote:Pierre is right I dont think run-off is what you want. I dont know if this is either but "river mouth" refers to where a river either starts or ends, hope this helps.
How about "delta"?


.
User avatar
Pierre
Membre / Member
Posts: 597
Joined: 25 Sep 2004 20:15
Location: Bruxelles

Re: marsh water

Post by Pierre »

Raskolnikov wrote:How about "delta"?
• estuary = where a river ends, becoming larger and larger (examples: the river Loire in France, the river Saint-Laurent, the Colorado river)

• delta = where a river ends, splitting in several branches, affecting approximately the form of an equilateral triangle, like the Greek letter Delta Δ (examples: the river Rhône in France, the Nile, the Amazon river, the rio Orinoco)

:drink:
π R
Post Reply