thumb|269x269px|Tanguar Haor is one of the largest haors in [[Bangladesh. A typical freshwater swamp forest can be seen on the right and the Khasi Hills of the state of Meghalaya in India are in the background.]] 269x269px|thumb|right|A haor in Sylhet Division|Sylhet region A '''''' () is a wetland ecosystem in the north eastern part of Bangladesh which is physically a bowl or saucer shaped shallow depression, also known as a backswamp. During monsoons receive surface runoff water from rivers and canals to become vast stretches of turbulent water.
thumb|269x269px|Tanguar Haor is one of the largest haors in [[Bangladesh. A typical freshwater swamp forest can be seen on the right and the Khasi Hills of the state of Meghalaya in India are in the background.]] 269x269px|thumb|right|A haor in Sylhet Division|Sylhet region A '''' () is a wetland ecosystem in the north eastern part of Bangladesh which is physically a bowl or saucer shaped shallow depression, also known as a backswamp. During monsoons receive surface runoff water from rivers and canals to become vast stretches of turbulent water.
==== 200px |right|thumb|A in Tangail District In Bangladesh and in the deltaic part of the Indian state of West Bengal, which lie in the floodplain of three great rivers, the Bengali language has several terms to differentiate between lakes, including , , and . All four are similar types of freshwater wetlands. The distinctions among a , or are usually small.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).