In the natural world, a channel that water flows through is a river or stream. In an engineered world, a channel could be a canal or an aqueduct. The ancient Romans used both canals and aqueducts to move water where needed in addition to relying on rivers and streams.
Channel flow is how much water flows through a channel.
yes
The Seine flows through Paris and eventually empties into the English Channel. The channel separates Britain from France.
The large body of water that flows in between England and France is called the English channel. It is not a river.
I believe that it is called a runoff.
There is no common river between England and France. The body of water that separates the two countries is the English Channel known as "La Manche" in French.
it dosent enter well sort of it starts at the top of a mountain. It rains and makes a channel(a path where water flows) then after it rains then it flows through the same path over and over.
channel is the path through which water flows,while flow is the transfer of water in channels,on the land surface called suface runoff, or in the soil and ground namely,throughflow,interflow,baseflowrespectively.
A goutlet of water likely refers to a stream or small channel through which water flows, often used for irrigation or drainage purposes. It is different from a standard water outlet or faucet as it specifically refers to a controlled flow of water in a defined channel.
A river is a body of water that travels through a channel in the Earth's surface. It flows in one direction, usually towards the ocean, and plays a vital role in shaping the landscape and supporting diverse ecosystems.
Rivers, lakes, canals, even sewers are bodies of water that flow downhill in a channel.
It could probably be a canal or a stream.