释义 |
waterlog
wa·ter·log W0051200 (wô′tər-lôg′, -lŏg′, wŏt′ər-)tr.v. wa·ter·logged, wa·ter·log·ging, wa·ter·logs 1. To make (a boat, for example) heavy and unwieldy by flooding with water.2. To saturate with water and make soggy or unusable. [Back-formation from waterlogged.]waterlog (ˈwɔːtərˌlɒɡ) vb (tr) to flood with waterwaterline
waterline[′wȯd·ər‚līn] (geology) shoreline (hydrology) water table (naval architecture) The intersection of the surface of the water with the side of a ship. A line painted on the hull of a ship showing the level of the water when the ship is properly trimmed. Waterline (also shoreline), the line of contact between the water surface of a body of water—such as a lake, river, or sea—and a dry land surface, or shore. The height and shape of a waterline vary owing to fluctuations in the level and changes in the nature of the shore that result from erosion, abrasion, or human activity. waterlineInside a cistern, the highest water level to which the ball valve should be adjusted to shut off.waterline (WL) A system of aircraft location designation. The water line is the measurement of height in inches perpendicular from a horizontal plane located a fixed number of inches below the bottom of the aircraft fuselage.ThesaurusSeewaterlogged |