Definition
A watering place or source of fresh water, especially in arid regions; a stock pond or waterhole.
Etymology
From Spanish 'agua' (water) plus -ada (a place characterized by something), used in Spanish-speaking regions to describe essential water sources in dry lands.
Kelly Says
In the American Southwest and Spanish colonial territories, knowing where the aguadas were could mean survival—these hidden water sources determined where settlements could exist in deserts, making them crucial to early maps and exploration.
Translations
ARالعربية
أ aguada
ah-gwa-dah
BNবাংলা
অ্যাগুয়াদা
ah-gwa-dah
CACatalà
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
CSČeština
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
DADansk
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
DEDeutsch
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
ELΕλληνικά
αγοῦδα
ah-goo-dah
ESEspañol
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
FAفارسی
آگوادا
ah-gwa-dah
FISuomi
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
FRFrançais
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
HEעברית
אגואדה
ah-gwa-dah
HIहिन्दी
अगुआडा
ah-gwa-dah
HUMagyar
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
IDBahasa Indonesia
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
ITItaliano
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
MSBahasa Melayu
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
MYမြန်မာ
အာဂွာဒါ
ah-gwa-dah
NLNederlands
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
NONorsk
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
PLPolski
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
PTPortuguês
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
RORomână
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
RUРусский
агуада
ah-gwa-dah
SVSvenska
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
SWKiswahili
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
TEతెలుగు
ఆగువా
ah-goo-wah
TRTürkçe
aguada
ah-gwa-dah
UKУкраїнська
агуада
ah-gwa-dah
VITiếng Việt
nguồn nước
ngoo-on-noh-kweh