Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text

The text related to the cultural heritage 'The English Lake District' has mentioned 'Water' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence Text Source
Most of these valleys display the U-shaped cross-section characteristic of glacial origin, and often contain elongate lakes occupying sizeable bedrock hollows, with tracts of relatively flat ground at their infilled heads, or where they are divided by lateral tributaries (Buttermere-Crummock Water; Derwent Water-Bassenthwaite Lake).
Derwent Water, one of 21 large water bodies in the Lake District
All the others such as Windermere, Coniston Water, Ullswater and Buttermere are meres, tarns and waters, with mere being the least common and water being the most common.
Bassenthwaite Lake Brotherswater Buttermere Coniston Water Crummock Water Derwent Water Devoke Water Elter Water Ennerdale Water Esthwaite Water Grasmere Haweswater Reservoir Hayeswater Loweswater Rydal Water Thirlmere Ullswater Wast Water Windermere
[43][44] The Lakes are also home to two other rare species: the schelly, which lives in Brothers Water, Haweswater, Red Tarn and Ullswater, and the Arctic charr, which can be found in Buttermere, Coniston Water, Crummock Water, Ennerdale Water, Haweswater, Loweswater, Thirlmere, Wast Water, and Windermere.
These are: Bassenthwaite Lake, Brothers Water, Buttermere, Coniston Water, Crummock Water, Derwent Water, Ennerdale Water, Haweswater, Loweswater, Red Tarn, Thirlmere, Ullswater, Wast Water and Windermere.
As I walked down at this place I was walled on both sides by those inaccessible high rocky barren hills which hang over onexe2x80x99s head in some places and appear very terrible; and from them springs many little currents of water from the sides and clefts which trickle down to some lower part where it runs swiftly over the stones and shelves in the way, which makes a pleasant rush and murmuring noise and like a snowball is increased by each spring trickling down on either side of those hills, and so descends into the bottoms which are a Moorish ground in which in many places the waters stand, and so form some of those Lakes as it did here.
Fell xe2x80x93 from Old Norse fjallr, brought to England by Viking invaders and close to modern Norwegian fjell and Swedish fjxc3xa4ll meaning mountain Howe xe2x80x93 place name from the Old Norse haugr meaning hill, knoll, or mound Tarn xe2x80x93 a word that has been taken to mean a small lake situated in a corrie (the local name for which is cove or comb), a local phrase for any small pool of water.