Want this question answered?
The waves pounding against the shoreline. The waves colliding with the shore. The waves breaking upon the beach.
The spurn point has changed by when the waves where crashing up against the walls and made the wall drop.
No. Waves are transferring energy from another source such as wind, boats, animals (fish, human ect) currents, Gravity ( Tides).
They get wet. They also slowly wear down or erode.
It's called erosion. The waves 'scrap' against the rocks and after a period of time, the rocks break up, then onto the next few rocks, and the next, and so on.
becaues large, crashing waves have a force large enough to put enough pressure on the rocks to crack them
wistful waves
waves crashing "like hands of the sea pounding on the seashore"
== "The waves crashing against the sides of a ship is like Poseidon's Fury." == A simile is a comparison using "like" or "as." You can start any sentence with "The waves crashing against the ship were like ..." and then use your imagination. Some further examples: "The waves were crashing against the ship like glass smattering on the floor." "The waves crashed against the ship as a bull might smash into the walls of a barn." The point is, you are making a comparison. If you want to compare the violence of such a thing, use comparisons that point out the violence. If you want to emphasize the sturdiness of the ship, use something different, like: "The waves were crashing against the ship like a prisoner trying to batter down the walls of his cell."
physical
The waves pounding against the shoreline. The waves colliding with the shore. The waves breaking upon the beach.
Love's Crashing Waves was created in 1984-06.
sometimes by the ocean waves crashing down on it and that can shape it or other rocks can crash down on it making it smooth or rough
on shorelines
a flood
Seismic waves.
The spurn point has changed by when the waves where crashing up against the walls and made the wall drop.