Defn: One who explores; also, an apparatus with which one explores, as a diving bell.
A variety of diving bell, the lateral as well as vertical motions of which are controlled, by the occupants.
It lives in a bell-shaped structure of silk, open beneath like a diving bell, and filled with air which the spider carries down in the form of small bubbles attached one at a time to the spinnerets and hind feet.
One who explores; also, an apparatus with which one explores, as a diving bell.
But the limitations of a diving bell are so well recognized that several inventors have tried adjusting movable arms to the bell, to be operated by the man inside.
A company has been formed in Japan for the purpose of using a new kind of diving bell, invented by an American, it seems.
But the trouble with a diving bell is that it can't be moved about as a man can move about in a diving suit.
You know--sunken wreck under the ocean, down in a diving bell perhaps, and all that!
She did go so far in a bad way as to plagiarize a long poem in a subsequent number of the "Diving Bell" but the editor found her out, and we all thought that a reproof from Emilie was sufficient punishment.
I will give my little girl readers a single specimen of my twelve-year-old "Diving Bell" verses, though I feel as if I ought to apologize even for that.
Captain Dickinson could find no diving bell in Rio, so this versatile officer proceeded to make one, and an extraordinary contrivance it was for men to risk their lives in at the bottom of the sea.
Then he decided to try a diving bell, King Willem I having bestowed upon him a more favorable privilege by the terms of which the salvage company was to have one-half of the treasure recovered.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "diving bell" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.