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单词 diving
释义

diving


dive 1

D0301100 (dīv)v. dived or dove (dōv), dived, div·ing, dives v.intr.1. a. To plunge, especially headfirst, into water.b. To execute a dive in athletic competition.c. To participate in the sport of competitive diving.2. a. To go toward the bottom of a body of water: We dove down to check the anchor.b. To engage in the sport of scuba diving.c. To submerge under power. Used of a submarine.3. a. To fall head down through the air.b. To descend nose down at an acceleration usually exceeding that of free fall. Used of an airplane.c. To engage in the sport of skydiving.4. To drop sharply and rapidly; plummet: Stock prices dove 100 points in a single day of trading.5. a. To rush headlong and vanish into something: The fugitive dove into the crowd and escaped.b. To plunge one's hand into something: dove into the cookie jar.6. To lunge or leap headfirst: dove for the loose ball.7. To plunge into an activity or enterprise with vigor and gusto.8. Sports To exaggerate a fall in an attempt to induce a referee to call a penalty on an opponent.v.tr.1. To cause (an aircraft, for example) to dive.2. To go scuba-diving to or along: We dove that reef last week.n.1. a. A plunge into water, especially done headfirst and in a way established for athletic competition.b. The act or an instance of going under water, as of a submarine or a skin diver.c. A nearly vertical descent at an accelerated speed through the air.2. A rapid or abrupt decrease: Stock prices took a dive.3. a. Slang A disreputable or run-down bar or nightclub.b. A run-down residence.4. Sports a. A knockout feigned by a prizefighter: The challenger took a dive.b. An exaggerated fall, especially by a hockey player, intended to draw a penalty against an opponent.5. a. A lunge or a headlong jump: made a dive to catch the falling teacup.b. Football An offensive play in which the carrier of the ball plunges into the opposing line in order to gain short yardage.
[Middle English diven, from Old English dȳfan, to dip, and from dūfan, to sink; see dheub- in Indo-European roots.]Usage Note: Either dove or dived is acceptable as the past tense of dive. In our 2008 survey 92 percent of the Usage Panel accepted dove and 72 percent accepted dived in the sentence. Keeping their New Year's Day tradition, the L Street Brownies dove/dived into Dorchester Bay this morning. This may seem odd considering that dived is actually the older form. In fact, the emergence of dove runs against the general tendency of change in English verb forms. Old English had two classes of verbs: strong verbs, whose past tense was indicated by a change in their vowel (a process that survives in such present-day English verbs as drive/drove and fling/flung); and weak verbs, whose past was formed with a suffix related to -ed in Modern English (as in present-day English live/lived and move/moved). Dive comes from one of these weak verbs. Since the Old English period, many verbs have changed from the strong pattern to the weak one; for example, the past tense of step, formerly stop, became stepped. Over the years, in fact, the weak pattern has become so prevalent that we use the term regular to refer to verbs that form their past tense by suffixation of -ed. However, there have occasionally been changes in the other direction: the past tense of wear, now wore, was once werede, and that of spit, now spat, was once spitede. The development of dove is an additional example of the small group of verbs that have swum against the historical tide.

di·ve 2

D0301200 (dē′vā)n. A plural of diva.

diving

(ˈdaɪvɪŋ) n (Swimming, Water Sports & Surfing) the sport or activity of diving into water or spending time under water
Thesaurus
Noun1.diving - an athletic competition that involves diving into waterdiving - an athletic competition that involves diving into waterdiving eventswim meet, swimming meet - a swimming competition between two or more teamsmatch - a formal contest in which two or more persons or teams compete
2.diving - a headlong plunge into waterdiveswim, swimming - the act of swimming; "it was the swimming they enjoyed most": "they took a short swim in the pool"belly flop, belly flopper, belly whop, belly whopper - a dive in which the abdomen bears the main force of impact with the watercliff diving - diving into the water from a steep overhanging cliffflip - a dive in which the diver somersaults before entering the waterfull gainer, gainer - a dive in which the diver throws the feet forward to complete a full backward somersault and enters the water feet first and facing away from the diving boardhalf gainer - a dive in which the diver throws the feet forward and up to complete a half backward somersault and enters the water facing the diving boardjackknife - a dive in which the diver bends to touch the ankles before straightening outswallow dive, swan dive - a dive in which the diver arches the back with arms outstretched before entering the water
Translations
潜水

diving

潜水zhCN
  • I'd like to go diving → 我想去跳水
IdiomsSeedive

Diving


Diving

 

the sector of productive activity involving submerging people underwater in special gear to perform various jobs. Diving involves diving technique (including labor safety in underwater jobs) and methods of diving work. The physiology and occupational hygiene of diving labor are investigated to determine the effect of the surrounding medium on the diver. Diving causes profound changes in the human organism through the effects of increased pressure, low temperatures, and other factors. On this basis the conditions of diving work and methods of preventing and treating occupational diving diseases are developed.

Man began to conquer the underwater world in very ancient times. The first divers went underwater to depths of 20-30 meters without any gear, holding their breath for up to two minutes. Later, divers began to use breathing tubes made of reed, leather bags with an air supply, the diving bell (in which the human being would breathe the air formed in the upper part of the bell—the “air cushion”), and—with the invention of the air pump at the end of the 18th century—diving equipment, the basic component of which is the diving suit.

The diving school that opened at Kronstadt in 1882 played a large part in the development of diving in Russia. It trained divers for the navy, made and improved diving equipment, and published rules of diving.

Diving has become widespread in the years of Soviet power. In June 1919 a decree was published, signed by V. I. Lenin, which nationalized the diving enterprises and their property and put them under the control of the Main River Transportation Administration of the Supreme Council on the National Economy. In 1923 in the Black Sea area the Special Purpose Underwater Work Expedition (EPRON) was formed. It subsequently consolidated all diving and ship-raising work in the USSR. At the start of the Great Patriotic War, EPRON was included in the composition of the Navy of the USSR and reorganized into the Naval Emergency Rescue Service. During the war years its divers successfully performed combat assignments, raised and repaired ships, and carried out other tasks. In the postwar period, the reconstruction and development of the USSR water system called for the training of a large number of qualified diving specialists and further improvement in diving.

Current diving gear includes the apparatus, technical devices, and equipment used to perform the various diving jobs. The gear that ensures human survival under the water is called the diving apparatus, which is further subdivided by the means of supplying gas mixtures for breathing into autonomous (self-contained) diving apparatus and nonautonomous apparatus; by the breathing method into ventilated apparatus with open, semiclosed, and closed breathing arrangements; and by the composition of gas mixtures for breathing into air, oxygen, nitrogen-oxygen, helium-oxygen, and so on. The part of the diving apparatus that forms the gas- and water-resistant shell isolating the diver from the external environment is called the diving suit.

The most common type of diving apparatus in the USSR is the ventilated three-bolt apparatus, in which the diver breathes compressed air fed from the surface by a hose. The depth of submersion in it is limited to 60 m (at a greater depth so-called nitrogen narcosis may occur). Underwater jobs at shallow depths (up to 20 m) are usually done in the 12-bolt ventilated apparatus. For submerging to depths up to 100 m the air-oxygen apparatus is used (supplying an air-helium mixture), while for more than 100 m the helium-oxygen apparatus (supplying air-helium and helium-oxygen mixtures) is used, which permits submersion to depths of 300 m and more.

At the start of the 1930’s in the USSR and abroad, a diving apparatus came into use with a self-contained oxygen breathing device, and in the 1940’s the aqualung appeared: a diving apparatus with an air tank, used for both simple diving jobs and for underwater sport.

Diving equipment supports the diver in his descent, his work underwater, and his rise to the surface. This equipment includes diving compressors and pumps; devices to prepare and feed gas mixtures to the divers for breathing; lowering and lifting devices; means of signaling, communications, and warning; hydrolocators; diving tools (manual, pneumatic, and explosive); and decompression chambers. Ladders, chairs, and descending lines are used to lower the diver for work in shallow areas; during deep-water work such special lowering-raising devices are used as a diving bell with a platform, a chair, and a winch.

Diving jobs are divided, according to their purpose, into emergency and rescue, ship, ship raising, ship repair, and underwater technical (the construction and repair of hydrotechnical structures, the laying and repair of underwater pipelines and cables, and so on). During the 1960’s, a special method enabling humans to spend extended times underwater in so-called underwater residential laboratories was developed to increase the efficiency of diving labor. This method makes it possible to eliminate the time spent unproductively for decompression when the diver is rising to the surface from his daily work cycle. Diving labor is used extensively in foreign countries, where a great deal of attention is devoted to deep-water submersion involving the breathing of artificial gas mixtures. Diving has been significantly developed in the United States, France, Great Britain, and West Germany.

The profession of diver demands special training. Divers are divided into three classes by qualifications. The highest qualification is diving specialist (vodolaznyi spetsialist). The work of a diver is categorized as heavy labor. There are diving rules that strictly regulate diving labor in order to avoid accident and illnesses (such as caisson disease, pressure damage to the lungs, and nitrogen narcosis) specific to divers.

REFERENCES

Orbeli, R. A. Issledovaniia i izyskaniia [Materialy k istorii podvodnogo truda s drevneishikh vremen do nashikh dnei]. Moscow-Leningrad, 1947.
Diomidov, M. N., and A. N. Dmitriev. Pokorenie glubin, 2nd ed. Leningrad, 1964.
Edinye pravila okhrany truda na vodolaznykh rabotakh. Moscow, 1965.
Maksimenko, V. P., A. S. Nekhoroshev, and V. D. Surovikin. Vodolaznoe delo. Moscow, 1971.

V. P. MAKSIMENKO


Diving

 

the underwater swimming of animals that have pulmonary or tracheal respiration. Vertebrates adapted to diving include such mammals as pinnipeds, whales, beavers, muskrats, nutrias, otters, and sea otters. Birds that dive include anatids, loons, penguins, murres, and puffins. Among diving reptiles are crocodilians, many turtles, and snakes. Invertebrate divers include a number of beetles, such as the water scavenger beetles, the European diving beetles, water beetles, and the back swimmers.

Animals usually dive in search of food. They can remain underwater longer than humans. Murres and puffins can dive for five or six minutes, muskrats for 12 minutes, beavers for 15 minutes, Greenland and other large whales for 50 to 60 minutes (sperm whales for longer periods), bottlenose whales for two hours, and crocodilians for many hours. Seals, walruses, beavers, and aquatic birds dive to depths no greater than 30–40 m; most whales dive to 100–200 m (the sperm whale and bottlenose whale dive several hundred m).

The capacity for prolonged stays underwater is determined by an animal’s anatomical and physiological features. Among the most important of these is insensitivity of the respiratory center to accumulation of CO2 in the body; this permits prolonged retention of breath and more complete use of the O2 contained in the blood and lungs. Also important are special reflexes that slow cardiac activity and the angiospasm in muscles and other organs during cessation of breathing, thus enabling most of the blood to be directed to the central nervous system, which is especially sensitive to oxygen starvation. High myoglobin content in the muscles is also needed.

REFERENCE

Kreps, E. M. “Osobennosti fiziologii nyriaiushchikh zhivotnykh.” Uspekhi sovremennoi biologii, 1941, vol. 14, issue 3.

What does it mean when you dream about diving?

From a Freudian standpoint, diving into water may represent sexual intercourse. Also, bodies of water appearing in dreams often symbolize the unconscious, so diving may indicate jumping into and exploring the unconscious. More mundanely, diving in a dream may simply reflect a task from waking life into which we are “diving.”

Diving

(dreams)Diving in a dream suggests that you are trying to “get to the bottom” of a current situation or feeling. Water symbolizes the unconscious. Thus, another interpretation for this dream may be that you are delving into your unconscious. Finally, Freud thought that diving may have sexual connotations and represents intercourse.
AcronymsSeedivide

diving


  • noun

Synonyms for diving

noun an athletic competition that involves diving into water

Synonyms

  • diving event

Related Words

  • swim meet
  • swimming meet
  • match

noun a headlong plunge into water

Synonyms

  • dive

Related Words

  • swim
  • swimming
  • belly flop
  • belly flopper
  • belly whop
  • belly whopper
  • cliff diving
  • flip
  • full gainer
  • gainer
  • half gainer
  • jackknife
  • swallow dive
  • swan dive
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更新时间:2024/11/11 13:52:13