rivulet

RIV-yoo-let

A very small stream — a thread of water, narrower than a brook, often seasonal, sometimes no wider than a hand. Rivulets form on hillsides after rain, in the folds of terrain where gravity collects runoff into the first suggestion of a channel. They are the beginning of rivers — the point where diffuse sheet flow concentrates into a line. The word sounds like what it describes: something small, quick, and running.
Etymology
Italian rivoletto, diminutive of rivolo (small stream), from Latin rivulus, diminutive of rivus (stream).
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