No - some end in other rivers or lakes etc
all rivers end up in the ocean/sea
By, for example, draining into rivers.
Rivers
River water DOES flow into the ocean. Although some rivers flow into lakes, all those lakes have rivers flowing out of them that eventually end up in the ocean (except for a few inland bodies of salt water such as the Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lake).
The pronouns that take the place of the noun phrase 'all rivers' are 'they' as a subject, and 'them' as an object in a sentence.Examples:All rivers in our state empty into the ocean. They may join at some point before they get there, but whatever chemicals enter them eventually ends up in the ocean.
Rainwater flows downhill due to gravity and collects in rivers and streams that eventually lead to the ocean. The ocean acts as a drainage basin for all the water that flows from the land, creating a continuous cycle of water evaporation, precipitation, and runoff.
I KNOW that runoffs eventually go to rivers,streams, and then it goes to the ocean so the answer is OCEAN
Rivers are not pure freshwater sources of water. As they flow to the ocean, they pick up small amounts of mineral salts. These slightly-salty rivers flow into the ocean, and as this is a continuous flow and there are thousands of rivers, all the salt builds up, causing the oceans to be saturated with salt. Also, because water evaporates and salt does not, the oceans get saltier over time.
Water always seeks its lowest level, based on gravity's pull on it. Rivers flow downhill and eventually flow into oceans.
They might by the snowman melting and washed into the ocean
It goes underground and gets recycled back into the lake
how might the particles that make up a snowman end up in the ocean