beached

listen to the pronunciation of beached
الإنجليزية - التركية
{f} sahile çek
beach
kumsal

Kumsalda ateş yaktık. - We built a fire on the beach.

Birkaç çocuk kumsalda oynuyor. - Several children are playing on the sandy beach.

beach
plaj

Plajdaki kum beyazdı. - The sand on the beach was white.

Bütün günü plajda geçirdik. - We spent the entire day on the beach.

beach
sahil

Yılın hangi zamanında genellikle sahilde zaman geçirmek istersin? - What time of year do you usually like to spend time on the beach?

Tom ve arkadaşları sahile doğru gitti. - Tom and his friends headed towards the beach.

beach
kumsala çekmek
beach
karaya oturtmak
beach
kıyı şeridi
beach
kıyıya sürmek
beach
kıyı

Deniz kıyısında yaşadığım için sık sık plaja giderim. - I live near the sea so I often go to the beach.

Fransız Rivierası kıyısının çok güzel plajları vardır. - The coast of the French Riviera has very beautiful beaches.

beach
çimerlik
beach
{f} kumsala çek
beach
kumsalda
on a beach
Sahilde
beach
{f} karaya çekmek
beach
okyanustan
beach
den karaya çekmek
beach
(Askeri) KIYI BOYU: Kıyı hattından, arazinin fiziksel şeklinde bariz bir değişiklik arzeden noktasına veya daimi bitki hattına kadar uzanan saha
beach
sahil,v.kumsala çek: n.kumsal
beach
sahile çekmek beach buggy kum üzerinde sürülmeye elverişli çok büyük lastikli spor araba
beach
beachcomber hayatını sahillerden topladığı enkaz ile kazanan kimse
beach
{f} sahile çekmek
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
Simple past tense and past participle of beach
run or brought ashore
left stranded and helpless, especially on a beach

a beached whale.

Driven on a beach; stranded; drawn up on a beach; as, the ship is beached
Bordered by a beach
on a beach
beach
A horizontal strip of land, usually sandy, adjoining water
beach
A carefree time, something easy and relaxing

Life's a beach!.

beach
To run (something) aground on a beach
beach
{n} a sandy shore, strand
beach
(해빈, 해안)
beach
{i} shore, seaside; land alongside a body of water with sand
beach
A deposit of non-cohesive material (e g sand, gravel) situated on the interface between dry land and the sea (or other large expanse of water) and actively "worked" by present-day hydrodynamics processes (i e waves, tides and currents) and sometimes by winds
beach
(illustrated)
beach
Zone of unconsolidated material that extends landward from the low water line to the place where there is marked change in material or physiographic form, or to the line of permanent vegetation (usually the effective lint of storm waves)
beach
A gently sloping area adjacent to a lake or ocean that lies between the low and high water marks, which is devoid of vegetation, and is composed of unconsolidated material, typically sand or gravel, deposited by waves or tides
beach
Good shelving beaches, suitable for landing boats or larger vessels are often required Most ports have good beaches nearby, but these are often charged for or jealously guarded by local fishermen The nature of beaches in a coastal hex may be randomly determined and noted by the GM as necessary Roll l d 10: 1-2 No Beach 3-5 Fair Beach 6+ Good Beach Pindas can land on Fair or Good beaches Larger vessels require Good beaches No Beach indicates the coast does not permit any safe landings
beach
The part of a coast that is washed by waves or tides, which cover it with sediments of various sizes and composition, such as sand or pebbles
beach
The shore of the sea, or of a lake, which is washed by the waves; especially, a sandy or pebbly shore; the strand
beach
Pebbles, collectively; shingle
beach
the strip of land next to the sea It can be sand, shingle or pebbles
beach
To run or drive (as a vessel or a boat) upon a beach; to strand; as, to beach a ship
beach
a zone of loose material extending from the low water mark to a point landward where either the topography abruptly changes or permanent vegetation first appears Beaches may be composed of clay, silt, sand, gravel, cobbles, boulders, coral pieces or any combination of these
beach
Slang: Refers to where something will stay at It's proper position "That rack goes over to dimmer beach" See also "lives" Submitted by Karl Kuenning RFL from Roadie Net
beach
A beach is an area of sand or stones beside the sea. a beautiful sandy beach I just want to lie on the beach in the sun. = seashore
beach
land on a beach; "the ship beached near the port"
beach
If something such as a boat beaches, or if it is beached, it is pulled or forced out of the water and onto land. We beached the canoe, running it right up the bank The boat beached on a mud flat. American editor and inventor who built a demonstration pneumatic subway under Broadway in New York City in 1870. American pianist and composer best known for her songs and chamber music. Her Mass in E flat major was the first work by a woman to be performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra. American publisher whose aggressive journalism established the New York Sun as a leading daily newspaper. He is also credited with publishing the first syndicated news story. His son Moses Sperry Beach (1822-1892) invented a cutting device that allowed printing on a continuous roll of paper and a process for printing both sides of a newspaper sheet at one time. American bookseller. From 1919 to 1941 her shop in Paris, Shakespeare and Company, was a gathering place for authors such as Hemingway and Fitzgerald. She published the first edition of James Joyce's Ulysses in 1922. an area of sand or small stones at the edge of the sea or a lake (Perhaps from bAce ). Sediments that accumulate along sea or lake shores. One type of beach occurs as a sediment strip bordering a rocky or cliffy coast. A second type is the outer margin of a marine plain. The third type consists of narrow sediment barriers stretching for dozens or even hundreds of miles parallel to the general direction of the coast. These barriers separate lagoons from the open sea and generally are dissected by tidal inlets. Certain sediment forelands, such as spits, points, and tombolos (which connect an island with a mainland), occasionally are called beaches. Beach Boys Beach Amy Marcy Daytona Beach Huntington Beach Long Beach Miami Beach beach flea Virginia Beach
beach
n pantai
beach
n the gently sloping shore of a body of water which is washed by waves or tides, particularly covered by sand or pebble sized particles; see depositional landform
beach
an area of sand sloping down to the water of a sea or lake
beach
{f} go up onto the beach, go onto the shore; bring a boat to a beach or to shore
beach
A sand bunker
beach
any sand-filled hazard Example: Is my ball on the green or the beach?
beach
The zone of unconsolidated material that extends landward from the low water line to the place where there is marked change in material or physiographic form, or to the line of permanent vegetation (usually the effective limit of storm waves) The seaward limit of a beach is the extreme low water line A beach includes FORESHORE and BACKSHORE
beach
The terrestrial interface area in between land and a water body where there are accumulations of unconsolidated sediments like sand and gravel These deposits are laid down by the action of breaking waves
beach
an area of sand sloping down to the water of a sea or lake land on a beach; "the ship beached near the port
beach
(aka: "sand trap" or "bunker") any sand-filled hazard Often found near a putting green or around the landing area of the fairway Example: Doug's approach shot fell short of the green and in to the beach?
beach
means in relation to any river, stream or lake, refers to the zone of unconsolidated material that extends landward from the waterline to where there is a marked change in material or physiographic form, or to the line of permanent vegetation
beach
(1) A deposit of non-cohesive material (e g sand, GRAVEL) situated on the interface between dry land and the sea (or other large expanse of water) and actively "worked" by present-day hydrodynamics processes (i e waves, tides and currents) and sometimes by winds (2) The zone of unconsolidated material that extends landward from the low water line to the place where there is marked change in material or physiographic form, or to the line of permanent vegetation The seaward limit of a beach – unless otherwise specified – is the mean low water line A beach includes foreshore and backshore The zone of unconsolidated material that is moved by waves, wind and tidal currents, extending landward to the coastline
beach
the shore between the high and low water mark, covered with sand or pebbles BLACK a dark color like that of charcoal BLUE the color of the sky and water, can refer to many shades
beached
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