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  1. Dictionary

    water
    [ˈwɔːtə]
    noun
    water (noun) · the waters (plural noun) · waters (plural noun) · the water (noun)
    1. a colourless, transparent, odourless liquid that forms the seas, lakes, rivers, and rain and is the basis of the fluids of living organisms:
      "sodium chloride dissolves in water" · "can I have a drink of water?"
      Image of water
      Image of water
      Image of water
      Image of water
      • water as supplied to houses or commercial establishments through pipes and taps:
        "each bedroom has a washbasin with hot and cold water" · "water pipes"
      • one of the four elements in ancient and medieval philosophy and in astrology (considered essential to the nature of the signs Cancer, Scorpio, and Pisces):
        "a water sign"
      • (the waters)
        the water of a mineral spring as used medicinally for bathing in or drinking:
        "you can take the waters at the Pump Room"
      • a solution of a specified substance in water:
        "ammonia water"
    2. (the water)
      a stretch or area of water, such as a river, sea, or lake:
      "the lawns ran down to the water's edge"
      Opposite:
      • the surface of an area of water:
        "she ducked under the water"
      • found in, on, or near areas of water:
        "a water plant"
      • (waters)
        the water of a particular sea, river, or lake:
        "the waters of Hudson Bay" · "the government are taking us into unknown waters with these changes in the legislation"
      • (waters)
        an area of sea regarded as under the jurisdiction of a particular country:
        "Japanese coastal waters"
    3. urine:
      "drinking alcohol will make you need to pass water more often"
    4. (waters)
      the amniotic fluid surrounding a fetus in the womb, especially as discharged in a flow shortly before birth:
      "I think my waters have broken"
    5. the quality of transparency and brilliance shown by a diamond or other gem.
    6. finance
      capital stock that represents a book value greater than the true assets of a company.
    verb
    water (verb) · waters (third person present) · watered (past tense) · watered (past participle) · watering (present participle)
    1. pour or sprinkle water over (a plant or area) in order to encourage plant growth:
      "I went out to water the geraniums"
      Opposite:
      • give a drink of water to (an animal):
        "they stopped to water the horses"
      • (of a river) flow through (an area of land):
        "the valley is watered by the River Dee"
      • take a fresh supply of water on board (a ship or steam train):
        "the ship was watered and fresh livestock taken aboard"
    2. (of a person's eyes) fill with tears:
      "Rory blinked, his eyes watering"
      Similar:
      exude water
      become wet
    3. dilute or adulterate (a drink, typically an alcoholic one) with water:
      "staff at the club had been watering down the drinks"
      Similar:
      water down
      add water to
      thin (out)
      make thin/thinner
      make weak/weaker
    4. finance
      increase (a company's debt, or nominal capital) by the issue of new shares without a corresponding addition to assets.
    Origin
    Old English wæter (noun), wæterian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch water, German Wasser, from an Indo-European root shared by Russian voda (compare with vodka), also by Latin unda ‘wave’ and Greek hudōr ‘water’.
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  2. People also ask
    Fresh water is water with a dissolved salt concentration of less than 1%. Globally, fresh water is distributed unevenly. About three-quarters of global annual rainfall occurs in countries containing less than one-third of the world’s population.
    **Water** (H<sub>2</sub>O) is a **polar inorganic compound**.At room temperature, it is a **tasteless and odorless liquid**, nearly colorless with a hint of blue.This simplest hydrogen chalcogenide is
    Includes AI generated content
    Rivers and lakes provide common surface sources of freshwater. But other water resources such as groundwater and glaciers have become more developed sources of freshwater. They have become the main source of clean water. Groundwater is water that has pooled below the surface of the Earth.
    Around 70% of our planet is covered by water. The ocean holds about 97% of this water, and only around 3% is freshwater. Most of Earth's freshwater is locked glaciers in and groundwater, whilst the least amount of freshwater is directly accessible in our lakes and rivers.
    wmo.int
  3. Is a bay freshwater or saltwater? - Geographic Pedia - NCESC

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