Water
in sentence
7314 examples of Water in a sentence
An inhalation that could move
water
over gills followed by a rapid closure of the glottis preventing
water
from entering the lungs.
Sometimes, a bout of hiccups will go on and on, and we try home remedies: sipping continuously from a glass of cold water, holding one's breath, a mouthful of honey or peanut butter, breathing into a paper bag, or being suddenly frightened.
Imagine you're on a game show, and you can choose between two prizes: a diamond or a bottle of
water.
Now, imagine yourself back in the desert, only this time, you get offered a new diamond or a fresh bottle of
water
every five minutes.
If you're like most people, you'll first choose enough
water
to last the trip, and then as many diamonds as you can carry.
This is because of something called marginal utility, and it means that when you choose between diamonds and water, you compare utility obtained from every additional bottle of
water
to every additional diamond.
The first bottle of
water
is worth more to you than any amount of diamonds, but eventually, you have all the
water
you need.
That's when you begin to choose diamonds over
water.
And it's not just necessities like
water.
The kidneys make urine from a mix of
water
and the body's waste products, funneling the unwanted fluid into two muscular tubes called ureters.
In most toothpastes and many
water
supplies, we use tiny amounts of fluoride.
The warmer oceans are evaporating much more
water
vapor into the skies.
And they funnel all of that extra
water
vapor over the land where storm conditions trigger these massive record-breaking downpours.
There's so much extra energy in the atmosphere, there's so much extra
water
vapor.
The US Defense Department has long warned of consequences from the climate crisis, including refugees, food and
water
shortages and pandemic disease.
It's a difference of more than one degree, it's the difference between ice and
water.
He was a great swimmer, but frolicked in the
water
for so long that he only managed to come in eleventh.
Without water, a human can only survive for about 100 hours.
Most organisms need
water
to survive.
Water
allows metabolism to occur, which is the process that drives all the biochemical reactions that take place in cells.
But creatures like the tardigrade, also known as the
water
bear, get around this restriction with a process called anhydrobiosis, from the Greek meaning life without
water.
They curl up into a ball, pulling their head and eight legs inside their body and wait until
water
returns.
It's thought that as
water
becomes scarce and tardigrades enter their tun state, they start synthesize special molecules, which fill the tardigrade's cells to replace lost
water
by forming a matrix.
Beyond dryness, tardigrades can also tolerate other extreme stresses: being frozen, heated up past the boiling point of water, high levels of radiation, and even the vacuum of outer space.
And they're in diverse biomes including deserts, ice sheets, the sea, fresh water, rainforests, and the highest mountain peaks.
After hundreds of years of variations to the preparation method, the standard became to heat tea, pack it into portable cakes, grind it into powder, mix with hot water, and create a beverage called muo cha, or matcha.
Today, tea is the second most consumed beverage in the world after water, and from sugary Turkish Rize tea, to salty Tibetan butter tea, there are almost as many ways of preparing the beverage as there are cultures on the globe.
Claimed to have restorative properties, radium was added to toothpaste, medicine, water, and food.
The underground chamber contains a portion of bread, water, milk, and oil.
Licinia learns to collect
water
each day from a nearby fountain to cleanse the temple.
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