Nearly all lakes have streams flowing into them and out of them. Many lakes are streams that were dammed to form the lake. The outflow is the water flowing through or over the dam to control the lake level.
Source: Riverlorian.com
The primary outflow is the White Nile
The Athabasca River flows into Lake Athabasca. From there, it is on to the MacKenzie River.
Minnesota. The outflow from Lake Itasca. (I stepped across it once.)
Lake Texcoco had no natural outflow with a drainage basin like a reservoir or lake trapping the water which leads to total evaporation.
Lake retention time refers to measurements based on the volume of water in a lake and the average rate of outflow. It represents the amount of time it takes for a substance introduced into a lake to flow out of it again.
Sort of, except the river doesn't go directly to the sea. St. Mary's River is the main outflow for Lake Superior, and carries the water into Lake Huron. Lake Huron's outflow is the St. Clair River, which flows into Lake St. Clair, which flows into the Detroit River, which flows into Lake Erie, which flows into the Niagara River, which flows into Lake Ontario, which flows into the St. Lawrence River, which leads to the sea (in the form of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, an estuary of the Atlantic Ocean).
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The outflow from Lake Victoria into the NILE is in the country of UGANDA. However, if you say that the source of the NILE is one of the rivers feeding Lake Victoria (ie making the lake part of the NILE), then the country is RWANDA.
Lake Texoma is located in both Oklahoma and Texas within the USA. It's primary outflow is the Red River and covers a vast surface area of 89,000 acres.
The main course of the Great Miami River rises from the outflow of Indian Lake in Logan County, Ohio. approximately 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Lima. Ohio
The Gulf of Mexico
The Outflow of the Mississippi River is at St. Louis.