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undersea

/uhn-der-see/US // ˈʌn dərˌsi //UK // (ˈʌndəˌsiː) //

海底,海下,海底世界,水下

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : located, carried on, or used under the surface of the sea: undersea life.
adv.副词 adverb
  1. 1
    • : underseas.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • It took nearly three months from the date, April 20, 2010, for the energy corporation BP to cap the undersea wellhead.

  • Engineers Fadel Adib and Reza Ghaffarivardavagh at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge are working on one such undersea system.

  • It was off the coast of central California, near an undersea volcano.

  • At last the rover’s cameras revealed why these creatures — and hundreds, maybe thousands of others — had flocked to this undersea neighborhood.

  • Until now, these undersea “crop circles” were found only off the coast of Japan.

  • There is an expanded place-name index with more than 150,000 entries, and separate undersea, Moon, and Mars features.

  • Think advanced unmanned vehicles, all-aspect, broadband stealth, and undersea warfare.

  • The artifacts came from undersea dives and excavations from the area, which has been inhabited for at least 3,000 years.

  • Instead she now has new cards, such as one on which a youngster drew undersea creatures writing letters.

  • As though pulled toward its doom by some enormous undersea monster with ten thousand tentacles and a voracious appetite.

  • The navigation of the air approaches it in character, but does not present the vital problems of undersea travel.

  • These seem to have been used, at least, to operate doors of undersea crafts.

  • We were, apparently, a beacon in that sepia waste where modern undersea monsters were lurking.

  • I've had considerable experience in undersea work and can't let those boys drown without trying to help 'em!

  • A few strategically placed fluoros gave an eerie undersea light, just enough to see by—but no one could look in.