Predicate
Navigable means clear enough for ships to travel through. Sentence: A canal has to be navigable for a ship to go through it.
Canal. You can use spell checker to check on the spelling of many words. It's on the upper left hand side. It says: "Spell check your answer". Click on that area and spell check your words in the paragraph. It's real easy.
The compound noun 'Suez Canal' is a proper noun, the name of a specific place.
around, spread, end to end and that is all I have. !!(:
Words nearly the same as canal in meaning are waterway, channel, aqueduct, or conduit. Some words that are nearly the as canal same in sound are banal, chorale, corral, or morale.
In the sentence "Is transported cargo through the canal," "transported cargo through the canal" is the subject. The subject is what the sentence is about, and in this case, it is the cargo being transported through the canal. The verb "is" is the linking verb connecting the subject to the predicate, which would be any additional information about the subject or what the subject is doing.
Venice and Amsterdam are the best known. Bruges has a canal system. There are many canals in and around Manchester
Through the Welland canal.
They transported goods by horseback or with wagons.
Volkman's canal
the Suez Canal
Nottingham Canal runs through Nottingham. it connects to the River Trent as part of the Beeston and Nottingham canal system.
No. The Panama Canal passes through Panama.
Panama is the only country the canal passes through. There was initially interest (a bit of which remains to this day) of building the canal through Nicaragua - there are three proposals being 'floated' around in Nicaragua currently to build a new trans-oceanic passing, but the Panama Canal only goes through Panama.
•a substantial number of the canals constructed before the war were not profitable. •Railroads gained popularity because they could run all winter and were not as subject to disruption of service due to drought and floods. •One of the great ironies of history is that the slow-paced mule-driven canal boats transported the rails from foundries for building the railroads, which closed the chapter on the Canal Era by the 1870s.
The Panama Canal is a split of North and South America, so whenever goods are transported by water, they just pass through the Panama Canal instead of going all the way around South America. It helps take less time to transport goods.
George W. Goethals has written: 'Government of the Canal Zone' -- subject(s): Politics and government 'The Panama Canal' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'Slides at the Panama canal' -- subject(s): Engineering, Landslides