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BEACH

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beach

[beech]
–noun
1. an expanse of sand or pebbles along a shore.
2. the part of the shore of an ocean, sea, large river, lake, etc., washed by the tide or waves.
3. the area adjacent to a seashore: We're vacationing at the beach.
–verb (used with object)
4. Nautical. to haul or run onto a beach: We beached the ship to save it.
5. to make inoperative or unemployed.

Origin:
1525–35; of obscure orig.


beachless, adjective


2. coast, seashore, strand, littoral, sands. See shore 1 . 5. ground.

Beach

[beech]
–noun
1. Alfred Ely, 1826–96, U.S. editor, publisher, and inventor.
2. Amy Marcey Cheney [mahr-see] , 1867–1944, U.S. composer and pianist.
3. Moses Yale, 1800–68, U.S. newspaper publisher.
4. Rex El⋅ling⋅wood [el-ing-wood] , 1877–1949, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
5. Sylvia Woodbridge, 1887–1962, U.S. bookseller and publisher in France.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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beach   (bēch)   
n.  
  1. The shore of a body of water, especially when sandy or pebbly.

  2. The sand or pebbles on a shore.

  3. The zone above the water line at a shore of a body of water, marked by an accumulation of sand, stone, or gravel that has been deposited by the tide or waves.

tr.v.   beached, beach·ing, beach·es
  1. To run, haul, or bring ashore: beached the rowboat in front of the cabin; hooked a big bluefish but was unable to beach it.

  2. To leave stranded or helpless.


[Perhaps Middle English beche, stream, from Old English bece.]
Beach   (bēch)   
American editor and inventor who built a demonstration pneumatic subway under Broadway in New York City in 1870.
Beach, Amy Marcey Cheney 1867-1944.  
American pianist and composer best known for her songs and chamber music. Her Mass in E flat major was the first work by a woman to be performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
Beach, Moses Yale 1800-1868.  
American publisher whose aggressive journalism established the New York Sun as a leading daily newspaper. He is also credited with publishing the first syndicated news story. His son Moses Sperry Beach (1822-1892) invented a cutting device that allowed printing on a continuous roll of paper and a process for printing both sides of a newspaper sheet at one time.
Beach, Sylvia Woodbridge 1887-1962.  
American bookseller. From 1919 to 1941 her shop in Paris, Shakespeare and Company, was a gathering place for authors such as Hemingway and Fitzgerald. She published the first edition of James Joyce's Ulysses in 1922.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

beach 
c.1535, probably from O.E. bæce, bece "stream," from P.Gmc. *bakiz. The initial extension was to loose, pebbly shores (1596), and in dialect around Sussex and Kent beach still has the meaning "pebbles worn by the waves." Fr. grève shows the same evolution. The verb "to haul or run up on a beach" is first attested 1840. Beach bum first recorded 1962. Beachhead (1940) is on the model of bridgehead.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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