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submarine

/noun suhb-muh-reen, suhb-muh-reen; adjective, verb suhb-muh-reen/US // noun ˌsʌb məˈrin, ˈsʌb məˌrin; adjective, verb ˌsʌb məˈrin //UK // (ˈsʌbməˌriːn, ˌsʌbməˈriːn) //

潜水艇,潜艇,潜水器,海底捞

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a vessel that can be submerged and navigated under water, usually built for warfare and armed with torpedoes or guided missiles.
    • : something situated or living under the surface of the sea, as a plant or animal.
    • : Chiefly Northeastern and North Midland U.S. a hero sandwich.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : situated, occurring, operating, or living under the surface of the sea: a submarine mountain.
    • : of, relating to, or carried on by a submarine or submarines: submarine warfare.
v.无主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sub·ma·rined, sub·ma·rin·ing.

    • : to participate in the operating of a submarine.
    • : to move or slide under something.
    • : Slang. to be thrown under the steering wheel of the vehicle one is driving during a frontal crash.to be thrown out of one's seat belt in such a crash.
v.有主动词 verb
  1. 1

    sub·ma·rined, sub·ma·rin·ing.

    • : to attack or sink by submarine.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Undersea robots, submarines and devices that track fish or other sea animals use a similar technique.

  • Shuttered in a house on foreign soil where I don’t speak the language, I have found myself snapping back into submarine deployment mode.

  • Instead of rockets, the proposed lander would use fans to push itself around, almost like a submarine, turning the disadvantage of the dense atmosphere into an advantage.

  • After we’d laid the groundwork in the design-and-build class, my students and I were joined in our efforts by Draper Laboratory in Cambridge, where researchers work on things like missile guidance systems and submarine navigation.

  • Lost to the sea, sunken ships and submarines can create new habitats in the deep.

  • The new submarine and the LRS-B are “uploadable” systems that can carry more warheads if strategic requirements change.

  • William—absent Kate and Prince George—arrived by helicopter to Gosport Royal Navy Submarine Museum in Hampshire today.

  • The tactical balance between the surface warship and the submarine has strategic impact.

  • Other improvements are making the submarine more elusive and lethal.

  • The onetime nuclear submarine weapons officer has entered a not guilty plea.

  • Meanwhile, the Australian submarine has got up through the Narrows and has torpedoed a gunboat at Chunuk.

  • The submarine E.14 sailed into harbour after a series of hair-raising adventures in the Sea of Marmora.

  • As we were leaving, a message came in to say that an enemy submarine had been sighted off Gaba Tepe.

  • The submarine scare is full on; the beastly things have frightened us more than all the Turks and all their German guns.

  • Asking his commands, the stranger said, 'I am one of the submarine inhabitants of this neighborhood.

submarine - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary