Eggplants in the ground.
Lake Tahoe is on the state line between California and Nevada.
4 of the 5 Great Lakes - Superior, Huron, Ontario, & Erie are shared between the U.S. and Canada. The fifth Great Lake - Lake Michigan - is entirely within the U.S. and is NOT shared with Canada. Puget Sound is a large body of water and is shared between the U.S. state of Washington, and the Canadian province of British Columbia so you could consider that to be the 5th one that you are looking for.
For example the density, refractive index, state of matter, spectral properties etc.
Water to water is an example of cohesion, which refers to the attraction between molecules of the same substance. Adhesion, on the other hand, is the attraction between molecules of different substances.
Water does not have an ionic bond. It is a polar covalent molecule, meaning the electrons are shared between the atoms of hydrogen and oxygen.
Covalent compounds have shared electrons between atoms.
I believe the answer is wetlands.
An example of cohesion is when water forms droplets on a leaf due to the attraction between water molecules. An example of adhesion is water sticking to the sides of a glass due to the attraction between water molecules and the glass molecules.
Water moves according to an concentration gradient. Water potential gradient between two places
Yes, H2O (water) is not an example of a binary ionic compound. Water is a covalent compound composed of two hydrogen atoms bonded to one oxygen atom through shared electrons. Binary ionic compounds typically form between a metal and a nonmetal, involving the transfer of electrons.
Water fall is water flows down from a hill at a certain pace, making it a natural beauty in the eyes of the people. In most of the places, this can be found naturally and in other places for example, resorts, it is man made.
The electrons in the water molecule are shared by oxygen and hydrogen atoms. However, the shared electrons are attracted more strongly by the oxygen nucleus than by the hydrogen nuclei. The water molecule therefore has partically positive and negative ends, or poles.