1. Beach [shā tān] A flat beach along the water's edge or above the water's surface formed by sediment deposition. Beach [h m 4 I t ā n] refers to the flat [tān tú] shallow beach in the intertidal zone between the average high tide surface and the average low tide surface. Rush to the beach [qi m 4 ng t ā n] In order to get the boat out of danger, we tried to force it to rest on the shallow beach.
2. The floodplain [hé màn tān] is the arable land deposited by floods on both sides of the river. Shoal [qi m \u n tān] A shallow place in the sea, river or other water body, a beach formed by silt. Page 363
Beach: ㄊㄢˉ. The radical "difficult" is simplified to "difficult". According to ancient calligraphy, the pen is simplified, from water to sound. Sticking loess mud to birds is a difficult paradigm. Water and difficulty are two superimposed paradigms. The gap between water and impermanence is the paradigm of the beach. Original intention: the flat land or sandbar in the water deposited by rivers and seaside. Such as: beach head, beach, river beach, beach and salt beach.