A survey of international and some national lexicons indicates that the two
terms 'ditch' and 'drain' are equivalent used in the context of liquids
from the smallest to largest scales.

The term 'drain' however seems mostly to apply at the interface where the
water transitions from the substrate ( soil ) to free running water, down
flow from that the water is 'channeled' through ditches, fluves, shutes,
spillways, canals, and a multitude of functional confinements. One of the
earliest ( 1920 ) legal references to British and American law notes this
equivalence, and the following an extract from a 2017 global standard
saying basically the same thing.

UNESCO-WMO International Glossary of Hydrology at
https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000221862 -World Meteorological
Organization, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization:
"...will be useful to national hydrological services as well as educational
and research institutions throughout the world – especially for those who
require more than one language for understanding or communicating
information about the field of hydrology. In establishing recognized
international equivalents of hydrological terms, our goal is also to
minimise misinterpretations and consolidate the foundation for stronger
international cooperation."

407 ditch see also drain
Man-made small open channel constructed
through earth or rock for the purpose of lowering
and/or conveying water

415 drain see also ditch
Conduit or small open channel by which water is
removed from a soil or an aquifer, by gravity, in
order to control the water level or to remove
excess water.

Ditto with the USGS and the UK Ordnance Survey:

For example, OS MasterMap Topography Layer User guide - "Water - Water
features are defined as features that contain, delimit or relate to
real-world objects containing water. The physical water features shown in
OS MasterMap Topography Layer include: ...  drains and ditches; ... Dam,
ditch, dock, double, down,  drain  D, Double ditch or drain DD" ... a look
see at a lot of OS web map products show the same thing. In the case of the
UK, a vast amount of property lines are encoded as these ditches and
drains, so they formalized this equivalence to accommodate whatever the
locals called them.

There is no dependence on the size, width, depth, etc. A perhaps extreme
example ( due to heavily mechanized agriculture in the U.S. ), but still
illustrative is that the USDA construction guidelines make the following
distinctions:
Small ditches ( maximum top width 15 feet )
Medium-sized ditches ( top width 15 to 35 feet )
Large ditches ( more than 35 feet top width)
In SE Asian rice production, their largest ditches probably would be in the
'small' category compared to the U.S.    I don't read Chinese, Japanese,
Korean, etc. but I'm sure they have a couple thousand years of established
vocabulary for their field water handing.

The modern agricultural water handling industry ( what you would get if you
asked somebody to install a 'ditch' or a 'drain' in a field makes a
distinction as follows ( echoing the 'interface' idea above ):

Ditch — A man-made, open drainage-way in or into which excess surface water
or groundwater drained from land, stormwater runoff, or floodwaters flow
either continuously or intermittently
Drain — A buried slotted or perforated pipe or other conduit (subsurface
drain) or a ditch (open drain) for carrying off surplus groundwater or
surface water.

Ditches aren't restricted to water use. Sometimes they are there because
the material was sued to form an embankment, or used for road surface (
'borrows' in the USA ), animal control barriers, access control, boundary
marking, spill prevention and control of loose soils and aggregate slides.
And in all the water literature, in the U.S, and U.K., they pretty much
also freely used 'drainage ditch', not just simply 'ditch.

Predominantly, if the cut is not further improved from the native material,
it seems to be called a ditch, if structure is added like concrete lining,
wooden bank sides, maybe it will get a more specific term. Economics
dictates that for the most part these enhancements only occur over limited
lengths for flow control, erosion, obstacles, evaporation, etc.

Drainage structure means a device composed of a virtually non-erodible
material such as concrete, steel, plastic or other such material that
conveys water from one place to another by intercepting the flow and
carrying it to a release point for water management, drainage control or
flood control purposes.

Looking at the aerial photography majority of 'drains' in the OS based web
maps, they are pretty much 'swales' (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swale_(landform) ), without the distinctive
edges of a 'ditch'.

In conclusion:

For legacy tagging, ditch/drain should be left alone because of equivalence.

For new tagging, ditch or drainage_ditch, ditch:drainage, or 'whatever'
scheme should indicate it is a ditch for conduction of water, and
'drain_open' or some such to distinguish it from subterranean drains (
despite being buried, these are actually sometime more visible than the
ditches on aerial / sat photography ). Anything 'drain' should be confined
to where the ground interfaces with a open channel. But  a singular 'ditch'
would suffice.

Because of global variety and local conditions, there should be no 'size'
distinction, or distinction because of structural presence, materials, etc.

Local terminology takes precedence, at the highest level it is available.

While a dictionary might be a useful start for determining a meaning, there
is almost always some better source of definitions in a specific domain,
culture, and region, and location. The U.N., E.U., U.K., Scotland, and down
to Renfrewshire all have documentation of what terms mean in those local
contexts, for example.

Almost always, a single word will be immediately overloaded when used world
wide.Human languages have compound words, adjectives, verbs and adverbs for
a reason, and tagging schemes have equivalents.

Michael Patrick
Data Ferret
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