See also: crash-dive

English edit

 
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Noun edit

crash dive (plural crash dives)

  1. (idiomatic, military) An emergency maneuver by a submarine in which it suddenly descends, especially to considerable depth, usually in order to escape an attack or avoid a collision.
    • 2000 March 19, Charles M. Cooke, “Letters: Loose Lips, Sinking Ships”, in Washington Post, retrieved 25 October 2015:
      As the crash dive began at 1:50 p.m., the overboard ventilation valve had not been closed, which resulted in tons of water flooding the submarine.
  2. A rapid descent by a person or thing, ending in a violent collision.
    • 1985 October 4, Mel Gussow, “Theater: Three by Sam Shepard”, in New York Times, retrieved 25 October 2015:
      In "Icarus's Mother," a skywriter salutes two girls on a beach with the message, "E=MC2," and then swirls into a deadly crash dive.
  3. (trampoline) Three quarters of a front somersault, beginning on the feet and landing on the back.
    • 1990, Trampolining: The Skills of the Game[1]:
      The next routine can be the same as Routine 7 but with the crash dive being replaced with a one-and-three-quarter front somersault tucked (with a tariff of 0.7), making the total tariff 4.8

Verb edit

crash dive (third-person singular simple present crash dives, present participle crash diving, simple past crash dived or crash dove, past participle crash dived)

  1. (intransitive, idiomatic, often hyphenated, submarine operation) To perform a crash dive.
    • 2012 October 14, Lorna Inness, “Death on the Caribou”, in ChronicleHerald, Halifax, Canada, retrieved 25 October 2015:
      Cuthburt turned the Grandmere in time to see the U-69 within yards of his ship. Graf wasted no time in taking evasive action, crash diving and turning, barely escaping the Grandmere’s efforts to ram him.
  2. (transitive, idiomatic, often hyphenated, submarine operation) To cause (a submarine) to perform a crash dive.
  3. (intransitive, often hyphenated) To rapidly descend, intentionally or accidentally, in a manner that ends in a violent collision.
    • 2008, James Richard Snellen, South Pacific at Seventeen, →ISBN, page 48:
      At 0640 hours, a Japanese suicide plane crash-dove into the USS Gilligan.
  4. (transitive, often hyphenated) To rapidly descend, in a manner that ends in a violent collision with (something).
    • 1945 July 30, John Hersey, “Kamikaze”, in Life, volume 19, number 5, retrieved 28 October 2015, page 70:
      Twenty-two Jap suicide planes sighted destroyer off Okinawa April 16 and for more than two hours bombed and crash-dived the ship in a wild and apparently unorganized attack.
  5. (transitive, often hyphenated) To cause (something) to descend rapidly, in a manner that ends in a violent collision.
    • 1945 April 23, “World Battlefronts: Divine Tempests”, in Time, retrieved 25 October 2015:
      [T]he Japanese have organized a suicide corps of flyers whose mission is to crash-dive their explosives-laden aircraft into ships.

See also edit

Further reading edit