lakes probably
Those are deposition layers influenced by wind or moving water.
A wavy blue line on a map usually represents a river or a water body. It indicates the presence of water in that area.
The wavy features found on sandstone are known as cross-bedding or ripple marks. They are formed by the movement of water or wind, which creates layers of sediment that are inclined at an angle to the main horizontal layering of the rock. These features can provide information about the direction and intensity of the ancient currents that deposited the sediment.
'ondules' but there has to be a comma on top of the 'e'.
The wavy line between layers of rock is called a "cross bedding." Cross bedding forms when sediments are deposited at an angle due to currents, resulting in distinct layers that intersect at an angle to the horizontal bedding.
Wavy layers in rock deposits form due to folding, which occurs under high pressure and high temperatures. The rock layers bend and create the wavy appearance. Not sure if that is what you're looking for Wavy layers can also simply be a bedform within sedimentary rocks - these are called wavy bedding or wavy lamination.
If you are referring to wavy hair, or a wavy line, it is "ondulé/-e."
When a word is underlined by a red wavy line, it signifies that that word is misspelled.
Green wavy line
The Billabong company uses a black background with a white wavy line for a logo.
just staiten it and get layers and yes it can
tilde
lakes probably
Word also has a grammar checker that displays a green wavy line below a phrase or sentence when a POSSIBLE grammatical error is detected. Right click the green wavy line to display suggested corrections.
layers look great if they are done properly :-)
One wavy line (~) represents similarity. Two wavy lines (≈) means "approximately." THree wavy lines (≋) would most likely mean approximately identical to.