For what it's worth, in southern California where I grew up there are many rivers which flow only rarely, but they all have the property of leading to the sea. Their tributaries are called creeks, and there was no such thing as a "brook" in that region. The usage of "stream" is more ambiguous, but it does seem to be a diminutive. I've never heard it applied to a watercourse that was not actually flowing at the time.
I think a brook is fed by a spring and either terminates in a pond or lake. A creek is ground water run-off. A stream is fed by lakes or ponds that can be created by brooks or creeks. Creeks can feed runs - runs feed rivers along with any thing else. IMHO: If it can dry out because of weather, it is either a creek or run. I'm sorry, but you're all wrong. There is no standard measurement for a brook, a creek, or a river. A stream is typically a generic term for all flowing water. The actual names of creek, brook, or river were typically given during the states survey.
A chain consisting of links and was 66' long was used to measure out the townships. From there all property lines were to be measured from. During this process, when surveyers came to an obstruction such as a flowing stream of water, they had to get across and continue measuring.
Most of times they would name the water a river when it was wider than the chain. Stream as a noun sciences, [[umbrella term]] :. To push continuous data e. The difference between Brook and Stream When used as nouns , brook means a body of running water smaller than a river, whereas stream means a small river.
Brook as a verb transitive, obsolete, except in Scots : To use; enjoy; have the full employment of. If we sort them by the volume, what's the order? English - South-East England.
No, there's no volume difference between a brook and a stream. I don't want to say they're exactly the same, but I don't know what the difference is.
A creek is different. In England it's an inlet, an estuary, the part of a river that goes down towards the sea.
I don't think "brook" is used very often in current AmE, at least not in the Californian variety. It sounds poetic, perhaps; I would expect to see it in the name of a school or housing community, not so much to hear it in reference to a small river. I'd say creeks flow more slowly than streams, and they might have less water.
The difference is very small, though. The Language Level symbol shows a user's proficiency in the languages they're interested in. Setting your Language Level helps other users provide you with answers that aren't too complex or too simple.
Sign up Sign in. English US. Question about English US. What is the difference between stream and brook and creek and bourne?
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