If you mean "LA" as in the city of Los Angeles, then no; the only coastline in Los Angeles is directly to the west.
If you meant "anywhere in the Los Angeles area", then yes; from the Port of Long Beach, or from the peninsula of Rancho Palos Verdes, the midsummer sun does rise over the Pacific Ocean - but only because the coastline in that area is more east-west than north-south.
If you meant "LA" as in the State of Louisiana, then technically no; the summer sun does rise over the Gulf of Mexico, which isn't, strictly speaking, an "ocean".
a tide
true
When the earth stops its rotation the sun will also stop rising.
The sun sets to the west of Galway, over the Atlantic Ocean or Galway Bay if you are in the city area.
The sun has to come over your shoulder to see a rainbow because if the sun is next to the rainbow it is near impossible to see. see
Yes
The flag symbolises the rising sun over the ocean, represented by a clear background of white and a circle of red.
Panama City
The horizon seems to rise when watching it on a shore because the sun is moving down. To a person, it looks like the water is rising over the sun.
Japan.
The rise and fall of the ocean's water is caused by the gravitational pull from the moon and the sun.
The regular rising and falling of ocean water due to the gravitational pull of the Sun and Moon is called
The regular rising and falling of ocean water due to the gravitational pull of the Sun and Moon is called
a tide
The moon is always orbiting the earth, and can sometimes be seen when the sun is rising, depending on where you are located at on the earth. So if you can't see the moon when the sun is "rising," it means that it is not visible from your field of view from earth. (this means the moon is behind the earth and you can't see it at the moment).
The address of the Rising Sun Branch is: 111 Colonial Way, Rising Sun, 21911 2283
Bulges in the ocean are called tides. These are the rising and falling motions of the sea, caused by the gravitational pull of the moon and sun on the waters of the Earth.