yes
Usually the water is made from ice in the mountains that flow into oceans by the force of gravity.
From all the rivers in the world that flow into oceans.
No, rivers flow into oceans, and "source" implies "from." Sources of rivers are found in the mountains.
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.
Usually other bodies of water - other rivers, seas, oceans, lakes etc.
Surface and groundwater ultimately flow towards the lowest elevation in the area, usually to larger bodies of water such as rivers, lakes, or oceans. This movement is driven by gravity and the natural topography of the land.
That is a river. Rivers are bodies of water that flow downhill due to gravity and usually flow into oceans, seas, or lakes. They are important for ecosystems, transportation, agriculture, and providing water for drinking and irrigation.
Its not possible for a waterfall to flow through the oceans in the world they only flow through lakes, rivers but not oceans
Water that is not absorbed by soil typically runs off the surface, creating runoff. This runoff can flow into streams, rivers, and eventually oceans. It can also contribute to erosion and carry pollutants from the surface into bodies of water.
There are no oceans in the US... do you mean rivers? In any case, the East, Hudson, Mississippi and Susquehanna rivers alike flow into the Atlantic.
Indian and Atlantic
Water always seeks its lowest level, based on gravity's pull on it. Rivers flow downhill and eventually flow into oceans.