Once a tree gets planted and watered, roots start to grow. As soon as the roots grow a little bit or lots (doesn't matter), the roots send the water to the tree. First of all, it's not supposed to go up to the tree. It stays underground and the roota make it grow. Water has nothing to do with going all the way up!
Heat energy makes water evaporate and rise into the air as water vapor.
It Makes Water From The Leaves
adhesion of water to the wood and cohesion of water molecules
Typically, water makes up around 50% of a tree's total weight when it is living and actively growing. This water is absorbed through the tree's roots and transported throughout the tree to support its growth and functions.
because of gravity
Doughnuts are made from flour, yeast, water, milk, butter, eggand caster sugar.
A tree depends on sunlight, carbon dioxide, water, and the sugar substance it makes out of sunlight in it's leaves
it doesn't rise up because the yeast makes the bread expand.
Its little places in its trunk helps it store water
Yes of course they do. Tree branches are like the arms of the tree. As a person's body grows, their arms grow, and rise, with growth and rise of the torso < torso's in the stomach love, pffft people these days.
Yeast makes the crust rise.
Yeast makes bread rise.