ford
A shallow place in a river or stream where the water is low enough to cross on foot, on horseback, or by vehicle. Fords determined where roads went, where settlements grew, and where battles were fought. Before bridges, they were the points of connection between one side and the other — the seams in the landscape where travel was possible.
Etymology
Old English ford, from faran, to go, to travel. Cognate with German Furt. The word is embedded in hundreds of English place names — Oxford, Bedford, Stratford, Hartford, Stanford.
*
Surprise Me With a Word