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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LakeLake - Wikipedia

    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').

  2. Jun 6, 2024 · Whether you’re searching for a tropical beach vibe, a skyscraping alpine lake, or balmy water filled with golden non-stinging jellyfish, there’s a lake to suit every imaginable personality.

  3. Jun 8, 2024 · Whether it’s canoeing across a mountain-clasped lake in Canada’s Rocky Mountains, diving down to a ghostly petrified forest in Kazakhstan, fishing in Finland’s Lakeland as ospreys soar ...

  4. Jun 23, 2024 · Lake, any relatively large body of slowly moving or standing water that occupies an inland basin of appreciable size. Within the global hydrologic cycle, freshwater lakes constitute only about 0.009 percent of all free water, which amounts to less than 0.4 percent of all continental fresh water.

  5. Oct 19, 2023 · A lake is a body of water that is surrounded by land. There are millions of lakes in the world. They are found on every continent and in every kind of environment —in mountains and deserts, on plains, and near seashores. Lakes vary greatly in size.

  6. Jan 12, 2018 · Best for winter activities: Lake Louise, Canada. Turquoise, glacier-fed Lake Louise, encased by the snowy peaks of the Canadian Rockies, is spectacular enough in summer, but really shines in winter when it turns into one of the most beautiful ice rinks in the world.

  7. lake, Relatively large body of slow-moving or standing water that occupies an inland basin. Lakes are most abundant in high northern latitudes and in mountain regions, particularly those that were covered by glaciers in recent geologic times.

  8. Jun 23, 2024 · 1 Conversions for rounded figures have been rounded, thousands to the nearest hundred and hundreds to the nearest ten. 2 Salt lake. 3 Area of lake varies according to season; figure given represents area when the surface is at an elevation of about 920 feet (280 metres).

  9. A lake in the Lake District, Cumbria, England. A lake (from Latin: lacus) is a large body of water (larger and deeper than a pond) within a body of land. As a lake is separated from the ocean, it is not a sea. Some lakes are very big, and people in the past sometimes called them seas.

  10. Jun 6, 2018 · The world is full of lakes of all types and sizes. A lake really is just another component of Earth's surface water. A lake is where surface-water runoff (and maybe some groundwater seepage) have accumulated in a low spot, relative to the surrounding countryside.

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