What is the difference between shore and bank




















Mostly, it's at the sea. It describes a smaller area than 'coast' - the water sea or lake directly influences the land. Bank is the land at the edge of the river. Streets that run alongside a river are often called 'Bank Street'. See a translation.

The one learning a language! Foreshore is applied sometimes to the part of the shore between high and low watermarks but at other times is extended to include the beach. Coast denotes the land along the sea regarded especially as a boundary. Strand is elevated for shore or beach. Learn more. Can we use "shore" referring to river? Ask Question. Asked 6 years, 8 months ago. Active 5 years, 11 months ago. Viewed 22k times. Improve this question. I think that for a river to have a "shore", the area next to the river would have to be at least a few feet wide, and nearly level; ideally sandy like an ocean beach.

Otherwise, it's just a bank. But you could say you were at the "river's edge" in either case. Add a comment. Wikipedia has some good explanations of the terms.. Bank or shore seem the most likely to fit the rest of the description although beach could possibly apply. One really needs a picture of the area to decide which is appropriate.

Can you please help me to tell the difference between "shore" and "coast" to my students? Coast is a long line across a landscape, it covers a whole area, even a whole country. A "shore" is part of a coast, it's the part where the land meets the water.

If you were to imagine what each word 'focuses' on, one would focus on the length aspect coast while the other would focus on the linear aspect from sea to land, and describes the point just where land starts shore.

But I'm sure there are other things I haven't considered and better explanations will be provided by other people. If you want to describe somebody coming to land from the sea, you are talking about a sea-land connection, you need to use " come to the shore ", because " come to the coast " really doesn't make sense in this way, it has more of a meaning like, come from your house on land to see the coast, because it's more to do with the general outline of the shape of the land, rather than a 'connecting' point between land and sea.

Of course you can 'walk along the shore' and 'walk along the coast', because the sense is a bit of an overlap between both meanings, but trying to find examples where only one word works, I can think of a few scenarios where only one would work and it deals with what I mentioned about the length vs 'connecting point' distinction. Coastlines are on the world's vast oceans and seas, where shores can be either on the oceans or lakes large or small.

Just to add a bit more on usage: I would say that "shore" is something you can walk on like sand or flat rocks, or at least move across in the case of boulders and stuff.

A cliff dropping into the water would be part of the water's edge physical coast , but couldn't be called a "shore". This is the best question I've ever asked here seeing the answers and debate you have. I got more than I wanted. Thank you all. Hello everybody I'm Mohamed from Egypt. I learn English language but sometimes i find problem in the meaning of some words which have approximate meaning.

First let me say, you could probably use any of them and be ok Beach is definitely what you would use in reference to the sandy area. This is most often used. Such as, "the east coast". East coast would describe all of the eastern side of the US. Maine down to Florida But also, coast could just be the edge of the land and water. Coast being where the land ends and the water starts. It is much like a reference to where the land ends and the water begins.

However, I do know that in some regions, people say "we are going to drive to the shore and sunbathe" etc. Really, none would be wrong. It rather depends on where you live and what the colloquial saying is there.



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