Cohesion
Water has two important qualities: cohesion and adhesion. Cohesion means that water "sticks" to itself, forming drops on a flat surface. Adhesion means that water sticks to other things, such as copper pennies. The water adheres to the coin and coheres to itself, forming a bulbous drop of water on the coin.
It is called an enema.
it is arady tall Water evaporates (from the leaves) which causes a "vacuum" gradient; also capillary action (water sticks to the pant better than it sticks to itself, so it is actioned up the tube).
A point extending into a body of water is called a cape. The cape sticks out into the water beyond the adjacent coast.
it is the condensation of steam or water vapour that causes water droplets to stick on the sides of the bottle
because of its stick shape and color, it blends into sticks, branches, wood, and bark in the nature. this is called camouflage
A group of sticks is commonly called a bundle or a sheaf.
gas and dust sticks to itself and collapses
Gravitational instability theory
Gravitational instability theory....
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.
They used vases since they already had this new technology called CLAY