Water will move up slightly with momentum - say at the bottom of a waterfall, and surface tension will pull water slightly upwards at the edge of containers, but in general water will always go downhill. You can make water go uphill by using a wick action such as a piece of rope. Companies use a piece of rope to keep the tops of barrels from becoming water pools by using the small piece of rope to siphon the pooled water up and over the lip of the barrel. A dishrag placed atop the divider in a double sink with one side full will draw water into the rag and drip it into the empty side for a period of time. A central spinning devive such as a blender's blades will make the liquid in the container rise above the normal level. a cylinder or a vase shaped container with a larger top than base if tilted and rotated will make the liquid inside move uphill.
Sure. But it will move less water uphill than it takes to power the wheel. A waterwheel is not used to move water. Flowing or falling water moves the wheel which drives machinery.
It doesn't. Water flows downhill. It is transported to higher elevations as water vapor and then falls as precipitation.
It is because of the transpiration, The water is sucked through xylem and then it is transported to the stomata and the excess water is released through the stomatal opening.
You use a pump or a siphon.
yes
yes
upthrust
Yes. There's no material known that insulates against gravity.
Cohesion
because of gravity
Because the vapor is less dense than the air in which it's floating, so the buoyant force on it is stronger than its weight. Exactly the same way that a bar of soap or a rubber ducky moves upward through a bathtub full of water and against the gravity
Why does fluid move against gravity? Fluid, such as water, is lost due to osmosis and the internal pressure (aka turgor pressure).
By "capillary action."
because of the signals from the tree it allows the water to move..
Capillary action is not sufficient to lift water against gravity after certain height .
syphoning
not the force of water, but gravity and density does
Air pressure or water pressure makes water move.
This is called Capillary action.
Water's ability to move through thin tubes against gravity. No, it's the tendency of a group of particles to stick together.
Gravity and the moon and sun
Gravity
eventually you get the gravity suit this lets you move through water unhindered