A higher area of water is exposed to atmosphere.
just slowly walk and then let him see you and then he will run up a little more every time and jump over the puddle when you get there
When he charges at you, jump. He'll run into the next car. Run after him, jump over him, and repeat. After 3 or 4 cars, he'll run into the water.
jump
The word "jump" is typically in the present tense. Example: "I jump over the puddle."
The molecules in the water have spasm attacks every once and a while, and jump out of the puddle, evaporating. Soon, all of the molecules have done this, and the water is gone.
I'm sure it probably can... but I wouldn't know why.
The future tense of the verb "jump" is "will jump." This construction indicates an action that will happen at a later time. For example, you could say, "I will jump over the puddle tomorrow."
I had to jump over the mud puddle. Fences usually are high enough so farm animals cannot jump over them. Most wolves can easily jump over a fence.
As a verb: She decided to jump over the puddle to keep her shoes dry. As a noun: The jump from the diving board was exhilarating and made her feel alive.
you can't when he rushes at you , jump. keep doing this til he runs into the puddle and slips
they jump faster
Brandon can jump higher then Will Donovan