Largest lake in the world

Why do so many people forget about the Caspian Sea?

If you translate “loch” you get lake, a body of fresh water. The Caspian is an inland body of salt water hence “sea”.

So by that logic we can call the Great Salt Lake, the Great Salt Sea ?

Well at 92 by 48 miles wide, thats a bit of a stretch. I must however retract my statement of above. According to dictionary, lakes can be salt water. I guess Lake Baikal is the largest freshwater lake in the world.

By volume, that is. Lake Superior is the largest by surface area. I presume the Caspian Sea doesn’t get the title of ‘largest lake’ simply because it’s called a ‘sea’ instead of a ‘lake’.

The largest lake ought to be the Caspian Sea.

Lake Titicaca is the world’s highest lake. Me and a third grade friend had to go the the principal’s office because we would not stop laughing when we first heard of Lake Titicaca. I still think it is a funny name.

And the second-largest lake in the world is… Michigan-Huron. Though given two names by the French explorers who first encountered them separately, they are in fact connected and at the same level, and thus one continuous body of water.

Of course, that will catch on just shortly after everybody starts referring to “Lake Caspian.”

– Beruang

What, precisely, is the General Question here?

Who said anything about “lochs”? Anyway, “loch” is not synonymous (sp) with “lake”. Loch Fyne, Loch Linnhe and Loch Ewe are all parts of the sea, or “sea-lochs”. The first could possibly be described as a “fjord”, but not the others.

Sorry, grienspace, I hadn’t read this post closely enough before I made my above post.