Well Maybe he Person That Made It Or Whatever Was Called Eddy x ?? :S
no, but an eddy is related to all rivers and is a term used for a section in a river .
A whirlpool. An eddy is water that flows opposite from the normal flow of a river. When a river's water level rises, tributaries that point in the opposite direstion of the flow of the river will rise too. This water will flow upstream in the tributaries and fill them to the level of the river. In some regional areas, such as southern states of the US, an eddy is a part of a river that is set off from the river where the water has no flow at all unless the river is rising.
Probably a small whirlpool, or even an eddy.
No
Dwight Yoakam sang Cattle Call in his CD, 'In Others' Words'. I Personally prefer Dwight's version, but Eddy's is really good too.
Brazilians call amazon river :river sea
They call him mr. ed
In time of spate, flood, a river flow will be increased. Where it flows over rocky riverbed there will be great turbulence in the river flow. This will foam & eddy & the river surface area is subject to great disruption. Whitewater is the result, it is disrupted river flow.
What did the Romans call the river thames
As the crow flies, 1,000 miles from Buffalo Eddy on the Snake River to Westfield, IA.
The boat got into a violent eddy in the water, making it go around and around until everyone was feeling sick and dizzy.ExplanationIn water flow, an eddy is a current that flows opposite to the major flow, also known as a whirlpool.If on a river, an eddy is a current that will flow upstream in a side channel filling it, even if the flow is in an opposite direction of the original flow. It is equivalent to a stream's water level rising because the river it feeds has more water in it than the stream, thus making the water flow upstream. It can also be an area that seems not to have a current at all.Another exampleEddy is my best friend. (That example is just for a person called Eddy, not for the word "eddy", which is another word for a whirlpool!)
the source of the river