The body of water that flows within a channel is called a river. Rivers are natural watercourses that typically flow toward oceans, seas, or lakes, and they can vary in size and volume. The channel itself is the landform that contains the flowing water, which is shaped by the river's erosion and deposition processes over time.
The large body of water that flows in between England and France is called the English channel. It is not a river.
The "Main Channel".
I believe that it is called a runoff.
Channel flow is how much water flows through a channel.
The Seine flows through Paris and eventually empties into the English Channel. The channel separates Britain from France.
channel is the path through which water flows,while flow is the transfer of water in channels,on the land surface called suface runoff, or in the soil and ground namely,throughflow,interflow,baseflowrespectively.
Rivers, lakes, canals, even sewers are bodies of water that flow downhill in a channel.
yes
In the natural world, a channel that water flows through is a river or stream. In an engineered world, a channel could be a canal or an aqueduct. The ancient Romans used both canals and aqueducts to move water where needed in addition to relying on rivers and streams.
It could probably be a canal or a stream.
a tributary
Runoff water