|
SUNKEN |
Submerged |
|
SUNK |
Submerged |
|
DROWNED |
Submerged |
|
SHOAL |
Submerged sandbank |
|
|
FLOATING |
Not submerged |
|
GIVE UP |
Not submerged |
|
AFLOAT |
Not submerged |
|
SHOALS |
Submerged sandbanks |
|
|
SHIPWRECK |
Submerged vessel |
|
RIA |
Submerged valley |
|
IMMERSED |
Sunk or submerged |
|
PADDY |
Submerged rice field |
|
INSUBMERGIBLE |
Not capable of being submerged; buoyant. |
|
REEF |
Shorten mainsail on seeing a submerged hazard |
|
QUICKWORK |
All the submerged section of a vessel's planking. |
|
SUBMERGENCE |
The act of submerging, or the state of being
submerged; submersion. |
|
PLUNGE |
Hence, a desperate hazard or act; a state of being
submerged or overwhelmed with difficulties. |
|
CALF |
A small mass of ice set free from the submerged part of a
glacier or berg, and rising to the surface. |
|
OVERFALL |
A turbulent surface of water, caused by strong currents
setting over submerged ridges; also, a dangerous submerged ridge or
shoal. |
|
ATOLL |
A coral island or islands, consisting of a belt of coral
reef, partly submerged, surrounding a central lagoon or depression; a
lagoon island. |
|
ALLUVIUM |
Deposits of earth, sand, gravel, and other transported
matter, made by rivers, floods, or other causes, upon land not
permanently submerged beneath the waters of lakes or seas. |
|
GRIBBLE |
A small marine isopod crustacean (Limnoria lignorum or L.
terebrans), which burrows into and rapidly destroys submerged timber,
such as the piles of wharves, both in Europe and America. |
|
TEREDO |
A genus of long, slender, wormlike bivalve mollusks which
bore into submerged wood, such as the piles of wharves, bottoms of
ships, etc.; -- ca... |
|
RECLAIM |
...,
labor, cultivation, or the like; to rescue from being wild, desert,
waste, submerged, or the like; as, to reclaim wild land, overflowed
lan... |
|
TYMPANUM |
...ns by
which water is raised to the axis when the wheel revolves with the
lower part of the circumference submerged, -- used for raising water,
... |