These photos should be what happens when you put animal cells and plant cells in hypotonic, isotonic, or hypertonic solution.
Hypotonic means a solution where the water concentration is higher than the cell itself. While isotonic means the water concentration is same as the cell. And hypertonic means a solution with water concentration lower than cell
The left photo is put in hypotonic. Water molecules will flow from the solution to the cell, by osmosis. Therfore the animal cell will gain so much water that it bursts. But plant cell has a cell wall, it won't burst, it's just the cell membrane pushing against the cell wall, making the cell turgid and that's all.
The middle photo is the cells put in isotonic solution. Since the water potential of both the liquid and the cell is same, the net movement of water molecules is equal. Nothing gained water or loose water.
And the last photo is put in hypertonic solution. Water will flow from the cells back to the solution. That's why animal cell shrinks as it lost water. But in plant cells, remember it has a cell wall. The cell membrane shrinks, so it detached from the cell wall, this is call plasmolysis.
Hope I helped :=)