a delta
I believe it is the mouth of the river. The mouth of the Mississippi River dumps into the Gulf Of Mexico
the large body of water that flows across the land is a river.
The part of a river that empties into a large body of water is called a delta.
No, there is a difference. A pond is "a small body of water" A river is "a large natural stream of fresh water that flows inot the ocean" The difference: A river is a large body of water-a pond is a small body of water A river is a moving body of water-a pond is still and calm A river flows into a larger body of water-a pond stays in the same place and doesn't travel :) !!! jd218
A delta is a large, silty area at the mouth of a river at which the river splits into the mought is the end of a river, where it empties into a large body of water.
That is the mouth of the river.
"Large body of water" - "Oga sami/vai (sea/water or river)"
river
The "mouth" of the river. In the case of large rivers like the Nile, the Amazon and the Mississippi, the river picks up a lot of sediment and silt, eroded from the banks, and this silt is deposited in a fan-shaped are of land called the "delta". The name comes from the triangular shape of Greek letter delta.
A River.
James River
James River