Yes. I may seem clear, but there is a hint of blue in it. If you ever go to the north pole and dig in the ice, you can see water that is blue.
It is not blue water but water that has been treated with a chemical that is blue to control odor.
blue birds get there water from there wings there wings are blue cause they have water in them if you kill a blue bird and suck on its beek you can get water
water in ocean or sea is colored blue because of the replection of the blue sky... water is colorless...
sea water is in blue colour because of the sky's reflection
copper blue macke make water blue because the die from the macke spreds through the water causing it to turn blue
Blue the color of water and water bending
The ocean is blue because water is a blue substance.Many people are sure that bodies of water are blue because the water reflects the sky. But wouldn't this only make the shiny surface-reflections look blue? And doesn't water sometimes remain blue on cloudy days? Exactly. There's no mystery here; water looks blue because water *is* blue. Pure water is a blue chemical. It's not just the sky that creates the colors we see.
The water is reflecting the blue sky.
When you look into an ocean or a lake, the water looks like it's blue. But, up close, water isn't really blue. It's only blue when you look at it in big groups, (like an ocean or a lake, a pond etc.), because the sky is blue, so the color of the sky makes a blue reflection on the water, making it look blue. So, on a map, if you drew water as clear, nobody would be able to tell there was anything there at all! So, water on a map is drawn blue instead.
water
Yes it does turn blue in water, it dissolves blue.
The blue appearance of a lake is the result of the reflection of a blue sky on the water's surface. A jar of water indoors does not have a blue reflection from the sky and therefore does not have a blue color.