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The river Thames is the correct term. It is thought to originate with the Roman Latin word 'tam' meaning wide.
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It varies according to which meander you are referring to.
his willy is probably the wideness of the River Thames :D
It originates from a Latin word meaning 'wide'
The River Thames flows into an estuary near Southend in Essex. It is actually between the Counties of Essex and Kent where it meets the North Sea.
It is an estuary, Whitstable to Foulness is 18 Miles, Shoebury to Sheerness 5 miles
The width of the river Thames averages around 18 meters near the rise or start. The width of the river Thames increases the further downstream you go. Lechlade 18 metres wide Oxford 76 metres wide Teddington 100 metres wide London Bridge 265 metres wide Woolwich 448 metres wide Gravesend 732 metres wide Nore Light, 10 km wide Estuary (between Shoeburyness and Sheerness) 8 km wide Whitstable and Foulness Point, the estuary is 29 km across. Westminster bridge, just in front of the Houses of Parliament, is 826.8 ft (252m) wide, which is a fairly good indication of the width of the river at the point most visitors would see it. A few miles upstream, at Hammersmith, the bridge is only 700 ft (210m), whilst at Dartford, the last bridge on the Thames before the open sea, the bridge is 2,664 ft (812m) long.
The estuary between Shoeburyness and Sheerness is 8 Km wide. The estuary between Whitstable and Foulness is 29 Km
they can use it as a source of fish. It is used for pleasure and for transport. In central London, it is used for passenger ferries and for transporting heavy freight. The west of the Thames, from Teddington down is mostly used by pleasure craft.
The neuse river is about 1 mile wide :)
Who sing when they roll me down isle