Loch

/lɒx/ noun

Definition

A Scottish Gaelic word for a lake or a partially enclosed arm of the sea, especially in Scotland. Famous examples include Loch Ness and Loch Lomond.

Etymology

From Scottish Gaelic loch and Irish loch, both from Proto-Celtic *loku meaning 'lake'. Related to Latin lacus (lake) and English 'lake'. The word entered English through contact with Celtic speakers in Scotland and Ireland.

Kelly Says

The mysterious Loch Ness Monster has made 'loch' one of the most internationally recognized Scottish Gaelic words, even though Scotland has over 30,000 lochs! The pronunciation varies - Scots often use a guttural 'ch' sound like German 'ach', while English speakers usually say it like 'lock'.

Translations

AMአማርኛ
ሐይቅ
ARالعربية
بحيرة
BNবাংলা
হ্রদ
CACatalà
llac
CSČeština
jezero
DADansk
DEDeutsch
See
ELΕλληνικά
λίμνη
ESEspañol
lago
FAفارسی
دریاچه
FISuomi
järvi
FRFrançais
lac
GUGU
હ્રદ
HAHA
tafki
HEעברית
אגם
HIहिन्दी
झील
HUMagyar
IDBahasa Indonesia
danau
IGIG
mmiri
ITItaliano
lago
JA日本語
KKKK
көл
KMKM
បឹង
KO한국어
호수
MRMR
ह्रद
MSBahasa Melayu
tasik
MYမြန်မာ
အင်္ဂါ
NLNederlands
meer
NONorsk
innsjø
PAPA
ਸਰੋਵਰ
PLPolski
jezioro
PTPortuguês
lago
RORomână
lac
RUРусский
озеро
SVSvenska
sjö
SWKiswahili
ziwa
TAதமிழ்
ஏரி
TEతెలుగు
సరస్సు
THไทย
ทะเลสาบ
TLTL
lawa
TRTürkçe
göl
UKУкраїнська
озеро
URاردو
جھیل
VITiếng Việt
hồ
YOYO
ẹkun
ZH中文
ZUZU
ulwandle

Related Words

Explore More Words

Get the Word Orb API

Complete word intelligence in one call. Free tier — 50 lookups/day.