Drain line starting to clog or vent not working properly.
because the ice at north and south pole has melt
Blocked soil line
The Romans had built public baths there using the mineral springs and this gave rise to the name.
With care. The mechanics are interesting. I recently flushed out an old 25 litre drum of hydraulic oil using unleaded petrol. I put in a pint, flushed with the cap on tight, and the pressure rise was massive. The cap blew right off as I released it. Same is true, to a lesser extent as you mix with diesel.
Yes. The average temperature for a bath or shower is warmer than core body temperature. If a body is left in the tub for long periods of time, body temperature will begin to rise, just like anything else. Your body will react to maintain homeostasis, but its usually not enough to stop the rising temperature. Suggestion? Run a cooler bath, or add cold water if you are feeling too hot. If you are giving a bath to an infant, look at skin color, if the skin is really red, you should be lowering the temperature of the bath water. If you are wondering how hot a bath should be, run some water on the inside of your forearm, that is the most sensitive part of your arm. If its warm, its perfect :)
The water in the lake WILL rise, but the lake is so much larger, the change will not be visible to the naked eye.
Yes. Blow bubbles the next time you go swimming or take a bath. You will see the bubbles rise. Air is several hundred times less dense than water.
The chances of drowning in a bath tub depend on several things, most obvious of which would be your level of fatigue and/or the water level of a drawn bath - If said person is tired and fall asleep, they may eventually slide under the water level, although, in turn, this would wake said person, and through instinct they would rise above the water. Unless someone was fully unconcious, it isn't likely that someone could drown.
Because we take the water's space so it needs to rise. It was discovered by Aristotle when he fulled his bath full of water and it overflowed.
The future tense of "rise" is "will rise" or "is going to rise."
A boat floats in water because it is less dense than water. It does not fly into the air because it is far denser than air. Air can sometimes exert a buoyant force, for example a full balloon of air placed in a bath of water will rise to the surface.
Rise of Galvatron