By the Sad Sea Waves
That is called an accrostic poem
A poem by Julia Alvarez
Snow is the best Never disappoint you Only when it is winter Winter is going to be gone Fulfiling your dreams Loving your winter day All ways by your side when it snowing Keeps you company Every day it fall at winter Slowly coming down
There is a poem called At the Sea Side by Louis Stevenson, and it is six lines long.
In the beginning of West Side story, the story begins. LOL.
Transverse waves vibrate perpendicular to the direction of propagation. This means they oscillate in a side-to-side and up-and-down motion. Examples include light waves, water waves, and seismic S-waves.
P-waves those are up and down and next are S-waves that's side to side
Transverse waves move perpendicular to the direction of the wave's motion. As the wave travels, the particles in the medium oscillate up and down or side to side. Examples of transverse waves include light waves, water waves, and seismic S-waves.
Sound waves are longitudinal waves; they travel from side to side, not up and down like transverse waves.
That is called an accrostic poem
seismic waves actually the correct answer is S waves. trust me if you put seismic waves it will be wrong
S waves are more destructive than P waves because they travel in a more complex, side-to-side motion that can shake structures both vertically and horizontally. P waves, on the other hand, travel in a back-and-forth motion that may not cause as much structural damage.
Lord Alfred Tennyson's The Lady of Shalott. Loreena McKennitt set it to music.
Transverse waves cause particles to move perpendicular to the direction of the wave propagation, leading to side-to-side movement. This motion results in crests and troughs moving horizontally as the wave travels. Examples of transverse waves include electromagnetic waves such as light and radio waves, as well as the waves in a vibrating string.
S waves
Transverse waves are a type of wave where the particles vibrate perpendicular to the wave direction. This means that the particles move from side to side or up and down as the wave travels. Examples of transverse waves include light waves and electromagnetic waves.
Three examples of transverse waves in nature are light waves, water waves, and seismic waves. Transverse waves propagate by oscillating perpendicular to the direction of wave motion, causing particles to move up and down or side to side.