yes you can there is a special way to do it
Because when they are in the water, part of their head floats atop so their predators don't see them. It makes it perfect for the sense organs to be on the top part of the head so it can see, hear, and eat its prey, or watch for its predators without being seen.
They have a crest on their head that balances them
A supine float is floating in the water on your back with head above water.
breaststoke is the most common, but some swimming instructors teach you to do front crawl with your head above water. (reason being: so you can see whats ahead of you if you have to (for example) save/help someone in the water.)
A dolphin's blowhole is located on top of its head to facilitate breathing while swimming. This positioning allows them to surface and exhale quickly without having to lift their entire body out of the water, making it more efficient for them to breathe. Additionally, it helps them maintain a streamlined shape while swimming, reducing drag in the water. This adaptation is essential for their survival as marine mammals.
Wearing a cold water swimming hat while swimming in chilly temperatures helps to retain body heat, prevent heat loss through the head, and improve overall comfort and safety in cold water.
To jump headfirst in to water is to dive.
You could draw a picture of someone standing in a swimming pool, with the water level being above their head.
There is chlorine in pool water. If you accidentaly drink it (like I did once) you feel head pressure and your head starts to throb.
Swimming can be an adjective, e.g. swimming trunks, or 'a swimming head'. However, it can also be a noun, e.g. 'the sport of swimming', or a verb, 'the boy was swimming'. The present participle of "to swim" it is more technically a gerund used as a noun adjunct. Colloquiallly, a "swimming head" (from a head that is swimming, or confused) is an adjective.
-noun1.the act of a person or thing that swims.2.the skill or technique of a person who swims.3.the sport of swimming.-adjective4.pertaining to, characterized by, or capable of swimming.5.used in or for swimming: swimming trunks.6.immersed in or overflowing with water or some other liquid.7.dizzy or giddy: a swimming head.
Their ears are just a hole on each side of their head, only a few inches back from their eyes...just like a human's ears but they don't have lobes. Geese and ducks will often get water in their ears after swimming and it's pretty funny to watch them try to get the water out...there's a lot of head shaking going on, just a human being!