Lakes will usually have freshwater.
A lake is an inland body of standing water of considerable size. Lake Superior, one of the Great Lakes, is the largest freshwater lake in the world.
Where a freshwater river drains into an ocean, the fresh water may mix with the salt water ... this is called brackish water.
No, certainly not due to high salt content in ocean water.
Yes they do because the correct definition of estuary is a body of water that contains both salt water and freshwater
Salt in the water. Salt water.
No, it is definitely a freshwater lake!
its a freshwater lake
Some do, it depends on the type of lake that it is. There are freshwater lakes, and salt water lakes!
No, all LAKES are freshwater. OCEANS are saltwater. Lake Michigan is a freshwater lake, but the answer above is false. See, for example, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Salt_Lake or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake
A lake has freshwater and the sea has salt water.
No, Lake Michigan is a freshwater water lake. As a matter of fact it has the largest freshwater dune system in the world.
a salt water lake has a freshwater inlet but and inland sea has no inlet.
There is salt in every lake, river and stream in the hydrosphere. But the water in a lake is still freshwater because the concentration of the salt in most freshwater is extremely low, so it isn't noticable. Most lakes rivers and streams exchange water with other sources, and they also receive surface runoff, and groundwater flow, so the water is constantly being diluted. So a lake must either receive groudwater flow or surface runoff to contain freshwater.
freshwater lake has no salt and saltwater has many salt particles
Because the water of Great Salt Lake is very dense.
Lake Ontario is salted because I came in it.
Most are natural freshwater, but some may be saltwater.