Yes, a breaker can form before the wave approaches the beach. Breakers typically form when the wave's height exceeds the depth of the water, causing it to break and form whitecaps. This can happen before the wave reaches the shallow waters near the beach.
The full form of MCB in physics stands for Miniature Circuit Breaker. It is an electrical switch designed to protect an electrical circuit from damage caused by excess current.
As waves approach a beach, they slow down due to friction with the ocean floor. This causes the wave's height to increase and the wave to eventually break, transferring its energy to the shoreline in the form of wave run-up and backwash. This process is influenced by factors such as wave height, wave period, and the slope and composition of the beach.
no it can form any time. ^^^^^^^ thats bS
Water vapor can remain in the air for varying amounts of time before it condenses into liquid form, depending on factors such as temperature, humidity, and air pressure. Generally, water vapor can stay in the air for hours to days before condensing into liquid form as precipitation.
The ball had potential energy before it was dropped. This potential energy was due to its position above the ground.
Of course it can. That is why some waves don't reach the shore.
The singular form of were is was: I was at the beach. Jane was at the beach. We were at the beach. All of us were at the beach. The exception is the singular you still uses were, it doesn't distinguish between the singular or plural of you: When were you at the beach?
The possessive form of the singular noun beach is beach's.Example: The beach's sand was so warm.
traditional approaches to form
Mould Case Circuit Breaker
Residual current circuit breaker
Mould Case Circuit Breaker
Waves form a beach by eroding (moving) and depositing (dropping off) sand at a shore repeatedly until it makes a beach.
In order for the noun to be possessive, you'd have to formulate the sentence to show that beach owns something/has something that belongs to the beach. Then, you would add an apostrophe [which would show ownership, thus showing possession.] Example: The beach's rocks are jagged.
A fuse or circuit breaker will fit this description.
You spell beach in plural form as beaches not like -> beachs' or beach's
A beach party is a gathering of people on a beach, to celebrate some form of happy occasion.