Beach Definition And Etymology
Definition of beach entry 2 of 2 transitive verb 1.
Beach definition and etymology. La fermeture de ce beach avait fait suite à la décision du gouvernement du congo brazzaville de fermer le trafic entre kinshasa et brazzaville dans le cadre de la célébration des festivités du cinquantenaire. Beach to land upon a beach. Extended to loose pebbly shores 1590s and in dialect around sussex and kent beach still has the meaning pebbles worn by the waves. Beach bitʃ masculin congo brazzaville congo kinshasa anglicisme port d embarquement et de débarquement de passagers ou de marchandises.
Mot en 6 lettres. 1907 harold edward bindloss chapter 1 in the dust of conflict 1. A beech wood with silver firs in it rolled down the face of the hill and the maze of leafless twigs and dusky spires cut sharp against the soft blueness of the evening. The study of the origin and history of words or a study of this type relating to one particular.
It may be sometimes used for the shore of large rivers. N beach that part of the shore of the sea or of a lake which is washed by the tide and waves. Raised beach an accumulation of water worn stones gravel sand and other shore deposits above the present level of wave action whether actually raised by elevation of the coast as in norway or left by the receding waters as in many lake and river regions. N beach the loose pebbles of the seashore.
Cette définition du mot beachs provient du wiktionnaire où vous pouvez trouvez également l étymologie d autres sens des synonymes des antonymes et des exemples. 1941 emily carr klee wyck salt water when we finally beached the land was scarcely less wet than the sea. Countable often in the plural a beach or other expanse of sand. The canadian tar sands are a promising source of oil.
To run or drive ashore beaching the landing craft in the assault the storm damaged and beached half the fleet. Raised beach see under beach n. Connaissez vous le sens de beachs. Beach n 1530s loose water worn pebbles of the seashore probably from a dialectal survival of old english bece bece stream from proto germanic bakiz.
Beach third person singular simple present beaches present participle beaching simple past and past participle beached intransitive to run aground on a beach. 1892 james yoxall chapter 7 in the lonely pyramid. Chambers s twentieth century dictionary. It usually means the tract between high and low water mark.