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a river
A large natural stream of water emptying into a sea, lake or other body of water.
It is called a current, or occasionally a stream (e.g. the Gulf Stream that travels along the US coast and carries warmer water to northern Europe).
There are two answers to this question based upon the way it is written. A. A large natural stream of water emptying into a large "body" is called a river; and B. A large natural stream of water emptying into a larger body can be called a tributary. Normally this is a smaller river than the "large body". Thus the Missouri River is a tributary of the Mississippi River.
A large natural stream of water emptying into an ocean, lake, or other body of water and usually fed along its course by converging tributaries.
No, Lake Michigan is definitely a lake. A river is defined as "A large natural stream of water emptying into an ocean, lake, or other body of water and usually fed along its course by converging tributaries."
it is a U shaped body of water formed when a wide meander from the main stream of a river is cut of to form a lake
It is a fresh water stream.
The mouth of a stream is where the stream flows out into a larger body of water.
Lake
A river is a large stream of fresh water that flows across land and empties into an ocean, lake, or some other body of water.
river