Airplane, helicopter
An airplane or helicopter would fit these parameters.
yes
coal
Naturalgas
coal
Any vehicle that uses a combustable engine. Jet airplanes, and most cars and tucks are good examples. Train locomotives, and nuclear air craft carriers do not burn fuel to move. They burn fuel and convert and store the energy. But they do not use the energy produced from burning fuel to directly power their movement.
Water is produced when the fuel burns in the engine. The carbon in the fuel burns with oxygen to form carbon dioxide, while hydrogen in the fuel burns with more oxygen to form water. You only see it dripping out when the exhaust pipe is cold, because after it's warmed up the water comes out as steam and is invisible.
Gasoline burns quickly and is commonly used in internal combustion engines to power vehicles. Other transportation fuels are diesel oil, jet fuel, and compressed natural gas.
Every type of transportation we have uses some form of fossil fuel either to run it or build it.
The sun burns hydrogen as fuel through a process called nuclear fusion. This process involves the fusion of hydrogen atoms to create helium, releasing energy in the form of light and heat.
That's the motor, which burns fuel and propels the boat.
An internal combustion engine burns fuel inside.