The atmosphere doesn't have the capacity to hold all that water.If the water in the oceans all evaporated, the air would be so saturated with water that it would fall back down as rain.
Also, seas often have connections with rivers and lakes etc. So there is a constant supply of water from these water bodies. :)
The "until all the seas go dry" part is a figure of speech because the person that said that couldn't litteraly mean that. Obviously the seas could never go dry.
Rivers can and do dry up.
Time
Dry land.
None there are no freshwater seas and there will never be.
"River." You only need a special word if it does sometimes dry up.
This quote from Robert Burns's poem "A Red, Red Rose" expresses enduring love that will last until the end of time, even if the seas were to dry up. It captures the eternal love the speaker has for their beloved, promising to love them forever.
Dry land was called Earth and the water was called Seas, Genesis 1:10
Appear, dry there darkness theyโre seas, dry waters thing fly midst.Beast, above fly brought Very green.
No. A male cat's nipples do not produce milk so never "dry up" in the first place. A cat's nipples are part of the body.
The Amazon has never dried up before. This river is far too big, wide, and deep to ever dry up.
they are made up salt