The answer is true.
Sand is gradually carried down the beach by Longshore Drift.
move toward shore
It depends whether the shore is North, South, East or West of the sea.
as the water becomes more shallow the wave becomes bigger then once it peaks, its usually on land and collapses
When wind and waves push water toward the shore, water is often forced sideways by the oncomin waves. The water streams along the shore until it finds its way back to an open sea or lake a riptide can usually narrow and in a trench between sandbars, under piers and sometimes along jetties. Source: wikipedia.org
invection
Yep it sure does :) (:
water travling toward a shore
An off shore brease.
An undertow flows away from the shore, toward the open water.
yes. Salt Crystals can be moved by water, ice or wind and can come ashore.
The wave travels through the water without moving the water with it (the water moves but then as the wave passes the water moves back to where it was). The floating leaf stays with the water as the wave passes on its way to the shore.
b.
move toward shore
Toward the shore
Sand is gradually carried down the beach by Longshore Drift.
It depends whether the shore is North, South, East or West of the sea.