Submarine in a sentence as a noun

Giant hand-made submarine. It's the kind of mad, mad, science I dreamed of as a kid.

You could build a submarine with it. But it's also got an instruction manual that is a foot thick.

Com/submarine. html This entire thing appears to be just a paid advertisement.

Imagine if a submarine had to carry all the water it's propeller pushes on? That's rockets today.

The backbone of the modern nuclear arsenal is the ballistic missile submarine. Far more mobile and far harder a target than any railborn missile.

Submarine in a sentence as a verb

>Fooling people into mistaking a submarine for a whale doesn't show that submarines really swim Why not? Presumably part of the act of fooling would involve 'swimming' submarines.

School buses are interesting, most conversions are pretty bad like he said, you end up with a submarine effect which can make some people queasy when its rolling. Modern homes wheels are at times better inside than many homes I have been in.

It was a submarine rigged for silent running, deep and quiet, that's never bothered to surface for air. All of partner A's vaunted experience and extensive media contacts in the industry proved for naught in the end.

I used to be a submarine officer in the Navy, but I was discharged 2 years ago as a conscientious objector [1]. I left because I felt I had a moral responsibility to do so.

Pretty soon we will have 1 super tank, plane, submarine weapon thingy. The exit from senior military positions into the defense industry has created an awful supplier of tools to the troops.

Submarine in a sentence as an adjective

If our magical "runaway reaction" somehow overcomes this, and melts a hole in the vacuum chamber, then the atmosphere rushes in, both freezing cold and at intolerably high pressure, like the North Sea flooding into the hull of a submarine resting on the ocean floor. Fusion reactors don't melt down, or explode.

They also built the worlds largest homemade submarine btw. Until now they've developed solid rocket boosters, parachutes, recovery programs, astrouanut survival and cockpit, etc.

\n\n If our magical "runaway reaction" somehow overcomes this, \n and melts a hole in the vacuum chamber, then the atmosphere \n rushes in, both freezing cold and at intolerably high \n pressure, like the North Sea flooding into the hull of a \n submarine resting on the ocean floor. \n\n Fusion reactors don't melt down, or explode.

For those who are keen to travel to Mars: may I suggest a stint in the Peace Corps first, or on a nuclear submarine, or a tour in Antarctica. If that's not ambitious enough, please try attempting to terraform a desert, or establishing a colony under the ocean or on top of K2, or constructing a city that's mostly buried underground.

There was another article on HN a while back that had another great quote from Chomsky that does well to illustrate what I feel is his main point here: "Fooling people into mistaking a submarine for a whale doesn't show that submarines really swim; nor does it fail to establish the fact". Creating a computer that can produce millions of grammatical utterances does little to show that we understand language systems.

Submarine definitions

noun

a submersible warship usually armed with torpedoes

See also: pigboat U-boat

noun

a large sandwich made of a long crusty roll split lengthwise and filled with meats and cheese (and tomato and onion and lettuce and condiments); different names are used in different sections of the United States

verb

move forward or under in a sliding motion; "The child was injured when he submarined under the safety belt of the car"

verb

throw with an underhand motion

verb

bring down with a blow to the legs

verb

control a submarine

verb

attack by submarine; "The Germans submarined the Allies"

adjective

beneath the surface of the sea

See also: undersea