Submerge in a sentence as a verb

If the ice melts, the coin will submerge and be inside the ice if it re-freezes.

It makes total sense to submerge the menu until such time as it's needed.

Find something you love, submerge yourself in it, and try to make a business of it.

Or even easier, just submerge it without a person inside and see how deep it can go.

Think of 4 1-litre cartons side-by-side; that's barely enough to submerge a plate.

Those who laugh, as many do, are those who love to submerge themselves in a mob, feel its strength as theirs, chant and shake their spears as one.

A big enough tide could completely submerge a boat firmly enough anchored to the sea floor, for example.

The majority simply does not submerge that deeply into the technology.

Without that love is his practice going to be effective compared to that of someone who loves golf and wants to submerge themselves in it every waking hour?

If this happens, the rescuer will frequently submerge himself and use their legs and arms to forcefully push away from the victim before reengaging from behind.

In order to feel Death Note and truly understand the genius behind it, you must submerge yourself into its world for an extended period of time.

What is the best set of tools he should experience and submerge himself with to really understand the internet, both as a consumer and as a potential creator?

A story needs to submerge the reader in the story and emotions in the life of the protagonist; it needs to flow to grab the reader and good grammar is also a must.

I don't think that the problem here is sorting out when to use leeches and when to submerge the patient in water,.I think we need to understand actual physiology and medicine.

Apparently harddrives are not completely hermetically sealed for pressure equalization reasons, so you'd have to do some fiddling to submerge them.

The latter would submerge densely populated coastal areas and force humans to move to the new coastlines, but the overall capacity of the Earth to support life would increase, just as it did at the start of the Holocene.

Besides the fact that they're written by lawyers, a major reason software patents use such odd, useless jargon is because algorithms aren't actually meant to be patentable, but the PTO will let them through if they sufficiently submerge the algorithm in a sea of other gunk.

Submerge definitions

verb

sink below the surface; go under or as if under water

See also: submerse

verb

cover completely or make imperceptible; "I was drowned in work"; "The noise drowned out her speech"

See also: drown overwhelm

verb

put under water; "submerge your head completely"

See also: submerse

verb

fill or cover completely, usually with water

See also: inundate deluge