BBC Radio 4 - Radio 4 in Four - Burn, beck and burble: 11 words for water (2024)

We shower in it, surf it, sail on it and slurp it. Whether it’s coming out of our taps or falling out of the sky, water is an essential, everyday part of human life. As such, it’s no surprise that we have a plethora of amazing words for H2O and the various forms it takes. Here are our favourite weird and wonderful words to describe the wet stuff.

BBC Radio 4 - Radio 4 in Four - Burn, beck and burble: 11 words for water (1)

1.Rill

We’ve all heard of a brook or stream, but the word rill – a term that dates back to the 16th century and is probably German in origin – is less well known. It simply means a very small stream or rivulet.

2. Beck

In the North of England there’s a word of Old Norse origin that also means a small stream or brook: a beck. Beck is often used to refer to a brook with a stony bed.

3. Bourne

Who knew there were so many words for stream? Bourne is another one, meaning a small stream, especially one that flows intermittently or seasonally. It’s where the Dorset town of Bournemouth got its name – literally the mouth of the stream. In Scotland and the North of England the variant Burn is used, as in Blackburn.

4. Burble

Whilst we’re on small streams, there’s a word that’s predominantly used to describe the sound they make: burble. The water in a brook is said to burble as it travels over rocks and stones. The word was first used in the 1300's, likely someone’s attempt to imitate the sound of flowing water.

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5. Gill

In the North, an old Norse word is used to describe a ravine or the narrow body of water that flows through it: a gill. The alternative spelling ghyll is said to have been introduced by the Romantic poet Wordsworth.

6. Sound

Ever heard of a sound? It’s a large sea or ocean inlet, wider than a fjord or bay. Or, a narrow channel of water between two bodies of land, also known as a strait. That’s straightforward then.

7. Foss

Another word of Old Norse origin, foss is Yorkshire dialect for waterfall. Falling Foss is the name of a waterfall in The North York Moors National Park, popular with walkers who need to cool off.

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8. Mere

A mere is merely shallower than a lake.

What’s the difference between a lake and a mere? A mere is merely shallower than a lake: it is broad in relation to its depth. Rather confusingly, despite its name Windemere in the Lake District is not a mere. In fact, it’s the largest natural lake in England.

9. Dub

An old Northern and Scots word, dub refers to a small pool of normally stagnant water, or a pool in a river.

10. Pulk

When puddle just won’t cut it, try pulk on for size. It’s northern dialect for a hole of standing water, a puddle, a muddy pond or a mudhole.

11. Freshet

A freshet is the overflow of a river or stream caused by heavy rain or melting snow. When a river floods after a spring thaw, that’s a freshet. It would certainly feel fresh if you took a dip.

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FAQs

What is a Beck water? ›

In the North of England there's a word of Old Norse origin that also means a small stream or brook: a beck. Beck is often used to refer to a brook with a stony bed.

What is the difference between a brook and a stream? ›

Stream - any body of moving water that moves under gravity to progressively lower levels, in a relatively narrow but clearly defined channel on the surface of the ground. Brook - a small stream or rivulet, commonly swiftly flowing in rugged terrain, of lesser length and volume than a creek.

What is the difference between a burn and a beck? ›

Well, the word 'beck' comes from the Old Norse 'bekkr' – 'a stream'. It is the usual term for a stream in Viking settled Cumbria and Yorkshire but is missing from Northumberland where burn is used.

What does Beck mean in Yorkshire? ›

1) A stream. It is often said that beck is the usual word in those parts of England which were settled by Scandinavians, but the evidence in Yorkshire indicates that in some regions it was used as an alias for 'brook' quite late in place-name history: 1526 oon beke or brooke called Ryngheybeke, Farnley.

Which is bigger stream creek or Brook? ›

Rivers and streams flow to the ocean. A creek on the other hand is defined as a natural stream of water normally smaller than and often a tributary to a river or stream. While a brook is like a stream but smaller and shallower.

What is the difference between a burn and a river? ›

In local usage, a burn is a kind of watercourse. The term applies to a large stream or a small river. The word is used in Scotland and England (especially North East England) and in parts of Ulster, Kansas, Australia and New Zealand.

Is a creek bigger than a brook? ›

The dictionary defines a creek a small stream, somewhat larger than a brook.

What is a small stream of water called? ›

Streams smaller than rivers, roughly in order of size, may be called branches or forks, creeks, brooks, runnels, and rivulets. The very smallest kind of stream, just a trickle, is a rill.

What is the difference between a brook and a creek? ›

Rivers and streams flow to the ocean. A creek on the other hand is defined as a natural stream of water normally smaller than and often a tributary to a river or stream. While a brook is like a stream but smaller and shallower.

What is the difference between a stream and a creek? ›

While there are no strict definitions to distinguish these waterways from one another, we tend to reserve the term river for the largest of these flowing bodies of water while creek is used for the smallest and stream often applies to waterways that are in between.

What are the three types of streams? ›

One method of classifying streams is through physical, hydrological, and biological characteristics. Using these features, streams can fall into one of three types: perennial, intermittent, and ephemeral. Definitions and characteristics of each stream type are provided in this Appendix.

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