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body of water造句
31) Moving onto land may have been a survival strategy resulting from the need to abandon one shrinking body of water for another . 32) To cross ( a body of water ) at a ford. 33) To sit quietly while the central body of water to an onlooker. 34) Aphotic zone The lower part of a body of water where light intensity is insufficient to support photosynthesis. Compare hpotic zone. 35) The delta, and the existence of a channel etched into the crater wall, suggest that a river once flowed into a standing body of water. 36) Puddle: A small body of water that draws other small bodies wearing dry shoes into it. 37) To search or sweep the bottom body of water, as with a grappling hook or dragnet. 38) This body of water is of the last undisturbed ecosystems of its kind in the world. 39) This 321 - mile - long ( 517 - kilometer - long ) body of water is the only Great Lake located entirely the United States. 40) The giant snakehead will eat absolutely everything in a body of water then crawl over land to the next pond or lake. 41) Investigations conducted between 2007-2009 revealed a body of water that sits in the bottom of a narrow, steep-sided valley. 42) This body of water separates most of the state from famous Cape Cod. 43) To go toward the bottom of a body of water ; submerge. 44) Lake Mead is a man - made body of water fed by the Colorado River. 45) The Brisbane River is usually a placid body of water that flows through Australia's third largest city and expels into Moreton Bay without incident. 46) If you can't swim well but you need to cross a large body of water, you can use your pants as a flotation device. 47) It flolloped in a sympathetic sort of way, moving a fairish body of water as it did so. 48) A delta is a deposit of sediments that forms near the junction of some rivers with a standing body of water . 49) The point of maximum sunglint in this image is centered within Cape Cod Bay, the body of water partially enclosed by the "hook" of Cape Cod in Massachusetts (image right). 50) To transport ( people , vehicles, or goods ) by boat across a body of water. 51) The Romans adopted this name for the great body of water beyond the Mediterranean and since their other word for a big body of water was mare they in fact called the outer one the mare oceanus.