When two things that are alike stick together, they cohere. Water molecules in a cloud cohere to each other forming a droplet of water. More of these droplets cohere to each other forming larger droplets. When the cloud becomes saturated with water droplets it rains. When two (or more) different things stick together, they adhere. When you get caught in a downpour and your clothes gets really wet, the water makes your clothes adhere (stick) to your skin.
After water evaporates, it condenses into clouds. When enough water droplets form in the cloud, they can start to adhere to dust and other particles in the atmosphere. Once these droplets grow heavy enough, they fall to the ground as rain.
Sand has high porosity, meaning it has many small spaces between its particles where water can be held. The small size of the sand particles and the forces of attraction between water molecules and the sand particles also contribute to its water-holding capacity. Additionally, the irregular shape of sand particles creates more surface area for water to adhere to.
If you have to ask then you will more than likely need to hire a water well driller. If you are lucky enough to live in an area where the water table is only 20-30 feet below the ground you could actually dig/drill it yourself. Search "DIY water well drilling" in google.
Water is a polar molecule, meaning that one end is negative and the other positive. Substances dissolve in water by "sticking" to one end of the water molecule. The better the molecules adhere, the more you can dissolve into a given quantity. The relatively tiny size of the water molecule, combined with its high polarity, has led it to be called "the universal solvent."
Water molecules naturally adhere to other water molecules. As water vapor condenses in the air, the molecules collect into droplets until they are heavy enough to begin falling. Depending on the various weather conditions, these droplets can connect to other droplets before they reach the ground, thereby forming larger and larger drops, or they could evaporate before they reach the ground, returning to the gaseous state in the air.
bond, cling, cohere
adhere, cohere, incoherent, adherence
I tried to glue the vase back together, but it did not cohere.
Water molecules cohere to form a liquid due to hydrogen bonding between the molecules. This hydrogen bonding leads to a net attractive force between the molecules, allowing them to stay close together in a liquid state.
Some words that are synonymous to coalescence are: adhere, amalgamate, associate, bracket, cling, cohere, combine, commingle, commix, conjoin, connect, consolidate, fuse, incorporate, integrate, join, link, merge, mingle, mix, relate, stick, unite, wed.
cohere Nobe's Cokes
Cohere doesn't mean anything. If your were describing the word phonetically you may have meant coger, pronounced co-hair in english. If that is the case than it means "do you want to have sex?" in slightly different words.
cheero, coheir, cohere, echoer, heroic, reecho
Making sense.
It depends on the wallpaper. If it's paintable, then the water based primer will adhere. In fact, a latex paint will adhere without a primer. If the wallpaper has an anti-stick coating on it, then it probably isn't paintable.
The property of water that causes it to stick to other things is called cohesion. Cohesion is the result of hydrogen bonding between water molecules, which creates a slight positive and negative charge that allows water to adhere to surfaces. This property is what allows water to form droplets and adhere to surfaces like glass or plants.
cohesion causes water to adhere to itself. Adhesion causes water to adhere to other things. These two properties together allow for the "wick effect" a.k.a. capillary effect of water where water will actually climb tube.