The Atlantic Ocean.
The Northern Atlantic
That would be the Rio Grande river.
Lake Erie
No body of water separates the US. from Mexico
water
No. The Gulf of California is a body of water on the west of Mexico which separates the Baja California Peninsula (south of the US state of California) from the mainland Mexico. The Gulf of Mexico is on the southeastern US and east of Mexico, and US states such as Florida, Louisiana and Texas have shores on that body of water.
The Bering Straits are between Siberia & Alaska.
They bothe celebrate 'Noel' which is similar to 'Christmas'.It is customarily necessary to practice oceanic or atmospheric sailing in order to cross the body of water that separates the US from France, as it is not possible to exercise the customs of walking.
I'm guessing you want the Gulf of Mexico, since that separates the US from Mexico (to some extent, though the Rio Grande does that more thoroughly), Puerto Rico, and other Spanish-speaking islands in the Caribbean. ><><><><><>< Not Mexico, and Puerto Rico is not a country (it is a Commonwealth of the US) But the Gulf does separate the US from Cuba.
Mountains. We use the term "divide" to mean the place on a mountain or ridge that separates two directions of water flow.
No one, as it can't. They are developing an automobile that runs on water. It separates the hydrogen from the oxygen. The hydrogen burns.
That depends on what mainland you're referring to. Vancouver Island is separated from the US by the Straight of Juan de Fuca, Vancouver by the Straight of Georgia, and Asia by the Pacific Ocean.