freshwater

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Middle English freche watur, fresshe water; equivalent to fresh +‎ water.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (file)

Adjective[edit]

freshwater (not comparable)

  1. Living in fresh water.
    The trout is a freshwater fish.
  2. Consisting of fresh water.
    Lake Baikal is the world's largest freshwater lake in terms of volume.
  3. (nautical) Unskilled as a seaman.
    a freshwater sailor
  4. (economics) neoclassical, in reference to U.S. macroeconomics and economics departments near the Great Lakes.
    • 2012, John Quiggin, Zombie Economics: How Dead Ideas Still Walk Among Us, Princeton University Press (expanded paperback ed., 1st ed. from 2010), →ISBN, page 86.
      Meanwhile, the freshwater side of the dispute rapidly reverted to arguments from the nineteenth century, which had been debunked by Keynes and Irving Fisher.
    Synonym: sweetwater

Derived terms[edit]

Translations[edit]

Noun[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

freshwater (countable and uncountable, plural freshwaters)

  1. (countable) A body of fresh water
    • 1953, Publications of the Institute of Marine Science, volumes 3-4, page 100:
      Fossils with low Sr/Ca ratios indicating origin in a freshwater of a type which has a low Sr/Ca ratio: []
    • 1967, Bent J. Muus, The Fauna of Danish Estuaries and Lagoons[1], page 87:
      Smith (1958) found that N. limnicola in Lake Merced, virtually a freshwater, had no paragnaths or at the most one on section I against the "normal" 1–2.
    • 2013, Brian R. Moss, Ecology of Fresh Waters: A View for the Twenty-First Century:
      The chances of long-term preservation of fossils in freshwaters are minimal, for freshwaters are readily disturbed and destroyed by drought on the land masses.
    • 2015, Sophie Lake, Durwyn Liley, Robert Still, Britain's Habitats:
      Freshwaters are portrayed in many artforms, including books such as Kenneth Grahame's childrens'[sic] story Wind in the Willows.
  2. Alternative spelling of fresh water
    • 1978, Roger M. Waller, John T. Turk, Robert J. Dingman, “Potential effects of deep-well waste disposal in western New York”, in Geological Survey Professional Paper, page 21:
      Schematic diagram of the viscosity effect during the injection of freshwater.
    • 2002, Friedrich A. Schott, Physical Oceanography of the Indian Ocean During WOCE[2], page 1246:
      Above 200m, high-salinity water was being carried southward out of the Arabian Sea. This implies that most of the freshwater was imported into the Arabian Sea in the upper layer.
    • 2011, Guy Levy, P. Fine, A. Bar-Tal, Treated Wastewater in Agriculture[3]:
      Actual field data of Cl distribution in soil after irrigation with TWW and freshwater were obtained in a field experiment in Israel (Feigin et al., 2005; Fine et al. 2007).
    • 2014 April 20, Richard Conniff, “An evolutionary family drama”, in The New York Times[4]:
      Alewives are anadromous fish: Born in freshwater, they spend their lives in the ocean, returning annually to their birthplaces to spawn.

Translations[edit]