verb, dived or dove, dived, div⋅ing, noun | 1. | to plunge into water, esp. headfirst. |
| 2. | to go below the surface of the water, as a submarine. |
| 3. | to plunge, fall, or descend through the air, into the earth, etc.: The acrobats dived into nets. |
| 4. | Aeronautics. (of an airplane) to descend rapidly. |
| 5. | to penetrate suddenly into something, as with the hand: to dive into one's purse. |
| 6. | to dart: to dive into a doorway. |
| 7. | to enter deeply or plunge into a subject, activity, etc. |
| 8. | to cause to plunge, submerge, or descend. |
| 9. | to insert quickly; plunge: He dived his hand into his pocket. |
| 10. | an act or instance of diving. |
| 11. | a jump or plunge into water, esp. in a prescribed way from a diving board. |
| 12. | the vertical or nearly vertical descent of an airplane at a speed surpassing the possible speed of the same plane in level flight. |
| 13. | a submerging, as of a submarine or skindiver. |
| 14. | a dash, plunge, or lunge, as if throwing oneself at or into something: He made a dive for the football. |
| 15. | a sudden or sharp decline, as in stock prices. |
| 16. | Informal. a dingy or disreputable bar or nightclub. |
| 17. | Boxing. a false show of being knocked out, usually in a bout whose result has been prearranged: to take a dive in an early round. |

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