Without gravity, water drops wouldn't fall and the water clock wouldn't be able to function.
It would depend on which hemisphere the clock is located in. If it is located in the southern hemisphere, it maybe because of the counterclockwise movement of gravity in that part of the world.
Your whole body, including you brain, needs water to function or else you'll become dehydrated.
a vacuole is the part of a cell that stores water
Yes, since boats do not drift off into space. Water also contributes to gravity, part of the reason the Moon is boosted to ever higher orbits by tides.
Gravity in the most part The moon thorugh tides Capilliary action
The moons' gravity pulls on the part of the ocean water facing the moon making it higher so that it covers more of the shoreline.
Agents of erosion caused in part by the force of gravity include mass wasting processes such as landslides, rockfalls, and slumps. Gravity acts as a driving force for these processes by pulling loose material downhill.
Compaction is a part of the digestive function which limits the size of food so it can more readily be broken down and transported. It plays a large part in the intestines where it squeezes the water and nutrients from the food.
The clock light is an integral part of the clock and is not replacable by itself
because of the gravity of the earth
The pendulum is the part of a grandfather clock that swings back and forth. It regulates the timekeeping mechanism of the clock by controlling the rate at which the gears turn.
A part of a clock that starts with "pen" is the pendulum. The pendulum helps regulate the timekeeping of certain types of clocks by controlling the speed at which the clock's gears move.