brackish

Etymology
From Scottish (from ). Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬,, , 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. Perhaps a distant.

Adjective

 * 1)  Salty or slightly salty, as a mixture of fresh and sea water, such as that found in estuaries.
 * 2) * 1992, Joyce Carol Oates, Black Water, Penguin Books, paperback edition, page 4.
 * On all sides a powerful brackish marshland odor, the odor of damp, and decay, and black earth, black water.
 * 1) * 2004, David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas, Random House.
 * The water we took on at Chatham Isle is now brackish & without a dash of brandy in it, my stomach rebels.
 * 1) Distasteful; unpleasant; not appealing to the taste.
 * 2) Repulsive
 * 1) Repulsive

Translations

 * Arabic: آسِن, زُعَاق
 * Bulgarian: леко солен
 * Catalan: salabrós
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin:, 半海水
 * Danish: brak, brakt vand,
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German: ,
 * Hungarian: brakk, félsós
 * Icelandic: ísaltur
 * Indonesian:
 * Irish: goirt
 * Italian: salmastra,
 * Manx: sailjey
 * Maori: kurutai, kurutaitai, mātaitai, kōtaitai
 * Norwegian:
 * Bokmål:, brakt vann / vatn, , brakkvatn
 * Nynorsk: brakk, brakt vatn, brakkvatn
 * Ottoman Turkish: آجی
 * Polish:
 * Portuguese:, salobre
 * Romanian: sălcie,
 * Russian: ,
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish:
 * Tagalog: matabsing
 * Thai:
 * Welsh: lled hallt


 * Arabic: آسِن
 * Finnish:
 * German:
 * Japanese:
 * Maori: kōtaitai
 * Russian:
 * Spanish: