- submerse
- transitive verb (submersed; submersing) Etymology: Latin submersus, past participle of submergere Date: 1837 submerge • submersion noun
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
Submerse — Sub*merse , a. (Bot.) Submersed. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
submerse — index immerse (plunge into) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
submerse — (v.) early 15c., from L. submersus, pp. of submergere (see SUBMERGE (Cf. submerge)). Related: Submersed; submersing … Etymology dictionary
submerse — ► VERB technical ▪ submerge … English terms dictionary
submerse — [səb mʉrs′] vt. submersed, submersing [< L submersus, pp. of submergere] SUBMERGE submersion [submʉr′zhən, sub mʉr′shən] n … English World dictionary
submerse Wasserpflanzen — vandenyje skendintys augalai statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Augalai, kurių kūnas skendi vandens telkinio vandenyje: daugelis daugialąsčių dumblių, kai kurios samanos, vandeniniai paparčiai. Iš žiedinių augalų – nertys,… … Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas
submerse — submersion /seuhb merr zheuhn, sheuhn/, n. /seuhb merrs /, v.t., submersed, submersing. to submerge. [1830 40; prob. back formation from submersion < LL submersion , s. of submersio a sinking, equiv. to L submers(us) ptp. of submergere to… … Universalium
submerse — verb To submerge See Also: submersible, submersion … Wiktionary
submerse — (Roget s Thesaurus II) verb 1. To plunge briefly in or into a liquid: dip, douse, duck, dunk, immerge, immerse, souse, submerge. See ENTER. 2. To go beneath the surface or to the bottom of a liquid: founder1, sink, submerge. See RISE … English dictionary for students
submerse — v. submerge; immerse, cause to sink below the surface of a liquid; cover with water, flood; cover; sink adj. submerged, immersed, sunken; growing under water … English contemporary dictionary