After both are melted immerse the dipper and allow it to acquire the temperature of the melted lead.
Another method of protecting weapons from rust is toimmerse them in oil.
If roses are wilted before they can be placed in water, cut off the ends of the stalks and immerse in very hot water for a minute or two, and they will regain their pristine freshness.
Should the brushes seem a little stiff at the next painting, immerse them in turpentine; this will make them soft and pliable.
For the highest attainable precision one should by rights immerse the two plates of the condenser first wholly in air and then wholly in sulphur, if the ratio of the capacities is to correspond to the dielectric constant.
The problem was solved by Plateau of Ghent, whose method was to immerse the liquid in another of the same specific gravity.
Immerse spoons, cups, knives, skewers, or knitting needles used for testing fruits, in boiling water before using them in contact with the foods.
In these they delight to immerse themselves, till only their heads appear above the surface; or, enveloped in mud to protect themselves from the assaults of insects, they luxuriate in the long sedges by the water margins.
Footnote 1: At Celebes, whence the finest tortoise-shell is exported to China, the natives kill the turtle by blows on the head, and immerse the shell in boiling water to detach the plates.
Reed flutes and drums are their chief instruments of music; the former they immerse in a shallow basin of water, and thereby imitate the warbling of birds.
Take a crystal of alum, break off a corner and then immerse the broken mass in its mother liquor; at once the crystal will repair itself, new molecules building themselves into its structure as if they knew where to go.
In such a case we immerse the body in a graduated vessel filled with fine dry sand, carefully sifted free of hollow spaces.
And then shall ye immerse them in the water, and come forth again out of the water.
Then shall he immerse him or her in the water, and come forth again out of the water.
A more sensational experiment is to substitute a tapering tin cup for the tube, then fill it with liquid air and immerse it in water.
Remove the kettle when the sugar of lead is all dissolved, and immerse the cord or rope in the solution for ten minutes, and then take it out and dry it in the air.
Immerse the phial in a crucible, filled with sand, closing the mouth of the former with a piece of charcoal, or a glass tube inserted in it.
Into a solution of nitrate of silver in distilled water immerse a clean plate or slip of copper.
The method of collecting by means of this instrument is as follows:--Immerse the vessel in the water, with the mouth downwards, so that no water may enter.
To bleach woods, immerse them in a strong, hot solution of oxalic acid.
And the Pharisee, seeing it, wondered that he did not first immerse himself before dinner.
I indeed immersed you in water; but he will immerse you in the Holy Spirit.
And coming from the market, except they immerse themselves, they do not eat.
And I knew him not; but he who sent me to immerse in water, the same said to me: Upon whom thou shalt see the Spirit descending, and abiding on him, the same is he who immerses in the Holy Spirit.
If they are too long to fit in the kettle immerse one end in the boiling salted water and in a very few minutes the ends of the spaghetti under the water will become softened so that the rest can be pushed down into the kettle.
When the water is near boiling put in the sugar then remove the lemon skin and immerse the pulp of the three lemons.
Some steep the cotton in the tannin bath over night, others immerse it from two to three hours in a lukewarm bath, while some enter it in a boiling bath, which is then allowed to cool down and the cotton is lifted out.
As long as it remains clean enough to use, keep up its strength by the addition of pure spirits, and in it immerse all specimens until they are thoroughly cured.
When the skin is thoroughly clean, immerse it in a strong bath of salt and water, and allow it to remain twenty-four to thirty hours.
Immerse the objects to be preserved in this solution, and keep them in it.
If the hair is tight on the skin everywhere, simply immerse it in the bath, leg bones and all, giving it plenty of room at first.
We beseech God therefore to immerse us in these surging seas, to grace us with the presence of these life-bearing breezes, and to cause us to abide in these divine and lofty precincts.
It would immerse us in limited allusions and distract us from that which is beloved in the court of the All-Praised.
Duruka (iduruk) na ang linĂlas nga buli sa tinĂ , Immerse the buri strips into the dye now.
To dive, or immerse another under water; or to avoid a shot.
Mix together equal parts of nitrate of ammonia and water, and immerse the tube in this mixture.
Let them dry; then immerse them all together in a solution of sub-carbonate of potass.
Immerse a slip of copper in dilute nitric acid, and it will be soon corroded and dissolved; but, if a slip of zinc be immersed with the copper, the zinc will be dissolved, and the copper remain unaltered and uninjured.
Close it at one end, and wrap muslin round it: then frequently immerse the tube in strong ether, allowing what the muslin soaks each time to evaporate, and in a short time the water will be frozen.
Attach a small piece of charcoal to the end of a copper-wire; make it red-hot, and immerse it in a jar of oxygen gas.
After holding the hands thus for some time, remove them, and again immerse them in the water at ninety degrees; when you will feel warmth in one hand and cold in the other.
Withdraw the wand, light it again, and when the flame is very brilliant, immerse it again in the jar.
Nearly fill a retort with water, and boil it over a lamp; then immerse the beak into a tumbler of cold water, and the disengaged steam will raise the water to the boiling temperature, though it be at a distance from the source of heat.
Immerse gold leaf in a jar of chlorine gas, and combustion with a beautiful green flame will take place.
In either case egg and crumb them thoroughly, place them in the wire-basket as you do them, which immerse in fat hot enough to crisp bread instantly.
Take the crumb of a French roll, cut it into rounds a quarter of an inch thick, put them into a wire frying-basket, immerse in hot fat, and crisp the bread instantly.
Garnish with fried parsley; take care the parsley is thoroughly dry, put it into a small frying-basket, and immerse it for an instant in the fat in which the fritters are to be cooked.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "immerse" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.