estuary
noun
- water body
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈɛstjʊəɹi/ / /ˈɛst͡ʃʊəɹi/ / /ˈɛst͡ʃəɹi/
name
- Estuary English
“Many of them would move to the new private housing estates springing up further east along the Thames Corridor, where they would learn to 'speak Estuary'.”
noun
Etymology: From Latin aestuarium (“creek”, “estuary of a river”).
- A coastal water body where ocean tides and river water merge, resulting in a brackish water zone.
“The railway then follows the widening estuary of the river, which at high tide has the appearance of a lake, but at low water presents a rather cheerless expanse of dark mud.”
“There's something special about tidal estuaries, due to the abundance of wildlife and the ever-changing scenes as the water ebbs or rises. Throw in some moody skies and filtered sunlight, and the views can resemble a painting by Turner - only you don't have to go to the National Gallery to see this, it's brought to your seat on a train.”
- An ocean inlet also fed by fresh river water.