Mount Rainier is the most prominent mountain in the contiguous US.
The tallest mountain in the continental US (and in the US, period) is Mt. McKinley/Denali in Alaska.
('Largest' is ambiguous, since it could be taken to refer to volume rather than height, and that's much harder to judge... where does one mountain leave off and the next in the chain begin?)
No.
A volcanic mountain.
The Columbia River
No, Mt Ranier is a mountain in Washington state.
Mount Rainier is the volcano that formed the mountain. They are one in the same.
Mt. Rainier is the highest mountain in the state of Washington.
No. It is not the highest mountain. That title goes to Mount Everest.
Mt. Rainier
The Cascade Mountains are made up of a chain of mountains. The tallest mountain in this range is Mt. Rainier which is 14,411 feet tall.
The Himalayas are not formed by subduction. They are the result of the Indian tectonic plate colliding with the Eurasian plate, causing the uplift of the mountain range. The other options (Mt. Fuji, Mt. Rainier, and Krakatoa) are associated with volcanic activity resulting from subduction processes.
Mount Rainier is a volcanic landform, specifically an active stratovolcano, located in the state of Washington in the United States. It is the highest mountain in the state and is part of the Cascade Range.
Mt Rainier.