A drinking fountain, or bubbler, yes. An ornamental fountain, no.
People who install drinking fountain water at public places should take all precautionary measures to maintain hygiene and provide safe drinking water to the public. If these guidelines are followed then it should be safe to drink fountain water.
Clear water, drinkable water, safe water, uncontaminated water, potable water, and purified water are all ways to describe safe drinking water.
No. "Non-potable" means "not drinkable", and if you can't drink it, you probably shouldn't put it in your mouth at all.
The Answer is no.
Yes, tap water in Boston is safe to drink. It meets all federal and state regulations for water quality and is regularly tested to ensure it is safe for consumption.
yeah it is :D
Yes , water is safe to drink throughout the whole country, some well water may not be safe to drink in very distant out of the way places, unless boiled.
it all deppends on the water source, like the water in Mexico is not safe to drink it wont kill you just make you very sick. if you have well water chances are that it may be safe but if are around industral plants then it would not be safe to drink some chemicals can seep thought the ground and into the well. if you have city water it is safe i have it and drink it all the time. some city's add chemical to clean the water and make it safe to drink.no it is not
You can make sea water safe to drink by boiling it. This will get rid of all the minerals in the water. I hope this helps you. You have to catch the steam from the boiling, that's the only safe part.
Among distilled, mineral, and top water, it is usually safe to drink them off. Distilled water is the best option as it has had all contaminates removed and is pure water.
That all depends on where it was bottled and what source was used.
If all the water on Earth is represented by a 1000-L tank, only about 2.5% of that is freshwater, and only a small fraction of that is accessible and safe for drinking (potable water). This amounts to roughly 25 L of freshwater, but only about 1% of that is readily available for human use, which is approximately 0.25 L or 250 mL. Therefore, in this analogy, potable water would represent about 250 mL of the 1000-L tank.
'Freshwater' is naturally occurring water with a low concentration of dissolved minerals and salts. However saying that it is 'freshwater' in no way implies that the water is safely drinkable. What little solutes are in it, can still be lethally toxic even at minute concentrations. The Freshwater definition will therefore exclude undrinkable seawater, but is not otherwise an indication of the water's purity or clarity, and can include poluted water in a stream, stagnating water in a pond, etc.