Hudson River, East River.
The Hudson River - this answer is wrong. The Hudson River is on the West side of Manhattan. The East River is on the East side of Manhattan. Laguardia airport is actually on Long Island. The East River still flows past the north side of LI where LGA is located.
The Hudson River flows down the west side of Manhattan and the east side of New Jersey.
The East River. Manhattan is separated from Brooklyn and Queens by the East River, which is not a true river, but a tidal strait. It connects to the ocean on both sides: it flows south from the bay known as the Long Island Sound, down the east side of Manhattan and the west side of Queens and Brooklyn (Queens and Brooklyn take up the western end of Long Island) and into the Atlantic Ocean at New York Harbor.
The Manhattan Bridge connects Manhattan and Brooklyn, at Canal Street in Chinatown (on the Manhattan side) and the Flatbush Avenue Extension, in the DUMBO neighborhood (on the Brooklyn side). DUMBO is an acronym for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass.
manhattan,mostly manhattan's upper east side.
Columbia University is on the West Side of Upper Manhattan, in the Morningside Heights neighborhood.
Yes. Long Island is across the East River from Manhattan. The East River runs down the east side of Manhattan, and the west side of Long Island.
Manhattan
At medical college on the upper east side of manhattan, sorry forgot the name and exact location.
Broadway is a street running from lower Manhattan along the West Side to Harlem. Most of the early theaters were on, or at least within two blocks on either side of, that street.
The body of water that allows people to pass through from one side of the Americas to the other is an enclave.
Well, some cities have mountains right beside them, with an ocean or other body of water on the other side, allowing the city to get some pretty regular rain fall, but say a city with mountains AND an ocean or other body of water were on the same side. If the body of water was on the opposite side of the mountain than the city, the city might become a bit dry during most of the year. If the body of water was on the same side as the city beside the mountains(meaning that the body of water is one the same side of the mountain that the city is.), than the city would get at least SOME rainfall, just not as much as if the mountains and body of water were on opposite sides of the city. (Sorry, what I mean by the sentence in the parentheses is that the body of water AND the mountains are on the same side beside of the city.)