There are two nouns. Water and pool are nouns.
The nouns are hand, cold, and water.
Azure is a bright blue color. The sky was clear and azure, as was the water.
You can refer to water as: H2OA teacher years ago called it the "universal solvent"; a misnomer of course, but perhaps closer to the truth than we usually realize.H2o
The sentence suffers from an ambiguous pronoun referencewhich occurs when it's not clear which noun the pronoun is replacing. The sentence must be rewritten.
C'est Clair - it's evident - l'eau Claire - clean/clear water - Claire is also a girl's name
The grammar is correct but there should be no capitals in the middle of the sentence. Only the first letter of a sentence or proper nouns and the pronoun 'I' are capitalized. There are no proper nouns in the sentence: "I water the plant." is correct.
No. There are a variety of impurities that cannot be seen in water.
The nouns are hand, cold, and water.
You can see water clearly through a clear glass.
no because they need to survive with sea water
In Freshwater, preferably in clear, clean water
In Freshwater, preferably in clear, clean water
The nouns are: tail's, splash, water. The pronoun is: him
Get a water filter and clean it at least twice a week.
Its not stagnant. Whether its from rain or underground rivers the water must be clear/clean. Dirty water is not clear, obviously.
The water in Destin Florida is so clear due to lack of population in that area. Also, there is less harmful chemicals that are dumped into the water which helps to keep the water looking clean and clear.
Clean filter