On the ground; stranded; -- a nautical term applied to a ship when its bottom lodges on the ground.
i think its just called "ran-aground"
The boat ran aground on the lake's sandbar.
The ship, forced in by a storm, ran aground on a small island.
On shore or on land; on the land adjacent to water; to the shore; to the land; aground (when applied to a ship); -- sometimes opposed to aboard or afloat.
"The ship ran aground just of the coast of NewFoundland" is one you could use.
Running aground, resulting in being "grounded", or aground. Run Aground. Should a vessel run aground and there be a tide that has receded enough to show the sea bottom, the vessel is said to be "high and dry." Also known as "Beached"
The vessel is in distress
If your boat runs aground, check to see if anyone's hurt, and render assistance as necessary.
If a vessel is aground on another boat, it must have had a collision with the boat it is aground on. The coastguard will therefore be investigating the scene with a view to prosecuting one or other of the vessels captains.
It is what happens to a ship when it sales into water that is shallower than its keel depth. It gets stuck on the bottum and is no longer afloat - it is aground.
The cast of A Ship Aground - 1988 includes: Alaknanda Samarth Kumar Shahani
Where is the vessel aground? Is there an environmental risk? Is there a potential loss of life? Does the vessel aground constitute a hazard to navigation? The US Coast Guard is not a salvage company. More detail in your question would help define the answer.