The word you're looking for is - ebb.
Tsunami.Although the literal translation for it does means harbor wave, this is the acceptable word for tidal wave as well.
The Japanese word 'nami' translates to English as 'wave'.
they didnt have phones back then so there is no such word
The sentence 'Tu es enfin de retour' means At last you're back home. In the word-by-word translation, the personal pronoun 'tu' means 'you'. The verb 'es' means '[you] are'. The preposition 'de' means 'from, of'. And the noun 'retour' means 'return'.
(Latin: flow, flowing; moving in a continuous and smooth way; wave, moving back and forth) Dean Cook (www.paranormalsceneinvestigators.co.uk)
throughflow means that water flows
tributary
It stands for "wave" or "surge" as in Tsunami.
Tsunami.Although the literal translation for it does means harbor wave, this is the acceptable word for tidal wave as well.
The word source means, a place where something has its beginning or is found. eg: one from where a river flows.
You probably mean the river bed.
It means wave or waves as in waves in sea or ocean. Like tidal wave etc
Unda is the Latin word for wave. You would say hello by saying salve. Say goodbye by saying, vale.
i think it means with water flows down like a waterfall
The term for a big wave or a wave with a great barrel is he'e nalu, but the word nui means big and nalu means wave so you can decide.
The word is estuary. It means where the river flows into the sea.
the answer is kusugetai - not to be confused with tsumetai which means cold.Once I told a lady in yokohama to put my meal back in the micro wave because it was still ticklish... oopps