Water
in sentence
7314 examples of Water in a sentence
What are the building blocks of a
water
molecule?
But if you record the voices of herders who carry spears and often hurt elephants in confrontations at
water
holes, the elephants will bunch up and run away from the hidden speaker.
We further placed
water
bodies along the prevailing wind corridors, so that evaporative cooling would create microclimates that, again, would enhance the quality of those spaces available for the inhabitants.
Instead, think of
water
molecules.
If you pour 18.01 grams of
water
into a glass, which is 18.01 milliliters, which is like three and a half teaspoons of water, you'll have 602 sextillion molecules of
water.
Remember our 18.01 milliliters of
water?
Well, that's a mole of
water.
Exchange the
water
particles for donuts.
And the deep matters as much as the stillness and the
water
do.
And so I let the
water
crush me.
I feel like a tiny dot, a little drop of water, floating in the middle of the ocean.
In terms of touch, I go from the soft, velvety feeling of the water, to air rubbing across my face.
It's about being at ease in the
water.
So my wife and I decided to film it and try to show another side of it, mostly to make people want to go into the
water.
But when you're in the water, you let yourself float, as if you were in space.
The day you get back into the water, when you hold your breath for a few seconds, you will reconnect with those origins.
Because of its unique chemical and physical properties,
water
is absolutely essential for all life as we know it.
And so we get especially excited about other worlds on which
water
is abundant.
Fortunately,
water
is very common in the universe.
But life needs
water
in the form of liquid, not ice, and not vapor, and that's a little bit less common.
For a planet to have liquid
water
at its surface, three things are important.
First, the planet needs to be large enough that the force of gravity keeps the
water
molecules from flying off into space.
Because without an atmosphere, the planet is in a vacuum, and liquid
water
isn't stable in a vacuum.
For example, our moon has no atmosphere, and so if you spill some
water
on the moon, it will either boil away as vapor, or freeze solid to make ice.
Without the pressure of an atmosphere, liquid
water
can't survive.
Too close, and the surface temperature will exceed the boiling point of water, and oceans will turn to vapor.
Too far, and the surface temperature will fall below the freezing point of water, causing the oceans to turn to ice.
You can imagine that the perfect zone where
water
stays liquid looks kind of like a belt around a star.
Microbes may thrive on Jupiter's moon Europa, where liquid
water
ocean probably lies beneath the icy crust.
And what about life as we don't know it, using a liquid other than
water?
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