No
no
The place where water leaves a lake to enter another body of water is called an outlet. The only lakes that do not have an outlet for this source are the great salt lake and the dead sea.
Lake Winnipeg empties into Hudson's Bay.
Flows north from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario
Yes, it is. And it is not the only landlocked body of salt water in the world. The Dead Sea and the Caspian Sea are two others Lake eyer is another in Australia, when it is full it has a very high concentration of salt.
Hudson bay
A river empties into a lake or ocean.
Great-water or Great-lake
The Great Salt Lake is located in the northern part of Utah. It is the largest salt water lake in the Western Hemisphere.
Lake Ontario and from the into the Atlantic Ocean
Lake Eyre is actually a salt pan most of the time. Water that flows into the lake is fresh, but because of the very high salt content of the saltpan that makes up Lake Eyre, the water becomes salty.
Not all "great" lakes are salt water. In fact, the Great Lakes on eastern North America and the separate Great Lakes of East Africa are freshwater. The Great Lakes of North America are Lake Superior (the world's largest lake), Lake Michigan, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, and Lake Huron. The Great Lakes of Africa include Lake Victoria and Lake Tanganyika. In Asia, the Aral Sea (actually a large lake), as well as the Caspian Sea (another lake, containing the most water of any lake on Earth), are both salty. There is also another lake, Lake Balkhash, which is fresh in the western half and salty in the eastern half (this is made possible because it is long and narrow). Lake Baikal, also in Asia, is freshwater, and the second largest lake on Earth. It contains 20% of the world's freshwater (most is in glaciers and icecaps). I may have missed a couple of "great" lakes.