Concept cluster: Recreation > Diving activities and roles
n
(non-native speakers' English) A free-diver.
n
acrobatic maneuvers performed underwater
n
An entertainment consisting of swimmers and divers performing to music
v
To scuba dive.
n
A diver who uses an aqualung.
n
A diver who uses an aqualung.
n
A spectacle consisting of underwater dance and gymnastics.
n
Sports involving water.
n
(diving) A dive from a platform that starts from the hands.
n
An activity where people in metallic cages are immersed underwater to undergo an experience with sharks
n
Someone who takes part in cave diving
n
(informal) A parachute.
n
A person who dives into deep water to collect coral.
v
Alternative form of divebomb [(of an aircraft) To bomb whilst in a steep dive.]
n
A person responsible for a group of underwater divers.
n
Someone who dives, especially as a sport.
n
The sport of jumping into water, often acrobatically.
n
A form of rapid traversal through shallow water used by lifeguards, consisting of a series of dive-like forward leaps alternated with tucking the feet under the chest.
n
A member of a fleet.
n
Alternative spelling of free-diver [(underwater diving) A practitioner of free-diving.]
n
Alternative spelling of free-diving [Any of various aquatic disciplines in which divers attempt to stay underwater without breathing apparatus for as long as possible.]
n
(underwater diving) A practitioner of free-diving.
n
Any of various aquatic disciplines in which divers attempt to stay underwater without breathing apparatus for as long as possible.
v
to stay underwater without the help of breathing-apparatus for as long as possible
n
Alternative spelling of free-diver [(underwater diving) A practitioner of free-diving.]
n
Alternative spelling of free-diving [Any of various aquatic disciplines in which divers attempt to stay underwater without breathing apparatus for as long as possible.]
n
A diver, especially one in a diving suit (as opposed to one in scuba gear).
n
A ritual performed by the men of Pentecost Island, Vanuatu, involving a jump from a tall wooden tower with a tree vine wrapped around each ankle.
n
Alternative form of land diving. [A ritual performed by the men of Pentecost Island, Vanuatu, involving a jump from a tall wooden tower with a tree vine wrapped around each ankle.]
n
Alternative form of lap pool [A swimming pool in the shape of a rectangle with narrow width and extended length, designed for swimming back and forth along the length in order to practice laps.]
n
(New Zealand, diving) A method of diving similar to a cannonball/bomb but with the lower back entering the water first, causing a large splash.
n
Alternative form of nosedive [A headfirst fall or jump.]
v
Alternative form of nosedive [(intransitive, of aircraft) To dive down in a steep angle.]
n
A specific competition in the Olympics, involving diving off a ten-meter platform from a three-meter springboard.
n
A person who dives for pearls.
n
(kayaking) The act of leaving an eddy and entering the main current.
n
A technique for bringing a drowning non-swimmer to shore, by holding their head out of the water, encircling their waist or hips with one arm, and supporting their buttocks or thigh on one's hip, while propelling oneself by kicking.
adj
Describing a dive in which the knees are kept straight, but the body is bent at a right-angle at the hips
n
A short airplane flight (in a puddle jumper).
v
(slang, intransitive) To ride a bicycle the wrong way down a one-way street.
v
To use a snorkel.
v
(rare) To perform scuba diving.
n
a person who swims underwater using scuba-diving equipment
n
(underwater diving) Underwater swimming using scuba equipment.
n
The act of swimming underwater without a diving suit.
n
Alternative spelling of skydiving [The practice of performing acrobatic movements during the freefall phase of a parachute jump.]
n
An instance of skydiving.
n
The act of swimming using a snorkel.
n
(nautical, UK) A submarine snorkel.
n
(sports) A combination of snorkeling and scuba diving where the swimmer uses the fins, mask, and breathing apparatus commonly used in scuba diving, but the oxygen tanks usually strapped to the back are instead attached to floating rafts that remain on the water's surface.
n
One who takes part in diving as a sport.
n
diving as a sport
n
The practice of jumping from the stage in a rock concert to be caught and carried aloft by the crowd.
n
Alternative form of stage diving [The practice of jumping from the stage in a rock concert to be caught and carried aloft by the crowd.]
n
Alternative spelling of stage diving [The practice of jumping from the stage in a rock concert to be caught and carried aloft by the crowd.]
n
underwater diving as a recreational activity
n
The state when a sweepboat is moving faster than the current of the water.
n
The act or art of sustaining and propelling the body in water.
adj
Of or relating to swimnastics.
n
Someone who practices synchronized diving.
n
A sport in which divers perform synchronised dives.
n
(Canada, figuratively) A quick, unstoppable decline.
n
(Britain) The practice of jumping into the sea or similar body of water from a cliff or other high point such that the jumper enters the water vertically straight, like a tombstone.
n
(obsolete) A diver, especially someone who searches for things underwater.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
  Reverse Dictionary / Thesaurus   Datamuse   Compound Your Joy   Threepeat   Spruce   Feedback   Dark mode   Help


Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!

Today's secret word is 7 letters and means "Origin or beginning of something." Can you find it?