0 present participle of submerge
1 to go below or make something go below the surface of the sea or a river or lake:
Supermarkets selling seafood are often located within larger multipurpose shopping and entertainment centers, submerging shopping into an experience of leisure.
In this stronger sort of community, we merge our own identity with - to the point of submerging it beneath - that of the group.
He conceals his own hand in constructing such "objective" knowledge, submerging his own subjective self within the rationality of medical science.
Because the underwater wireless communication is very difficult to realize, after some communication malfunction, the idea of submerging fish to a constant depth is not realistic.
In related fashion, scholars lament the manner in which patronage parties organized voters into politics: kindling distributive interests and ethno-cultural identities and submerging more fundamental material and ideological differences.
Birds in flight hovered for 2 to 3 s at 1 to 3 m above the water, then dived headfirst into the current, submerging the head and neck briefly.
It is one thing to form coalitions voluntarily by submerging differences in order to achieve an over-riding matter on which all are agreed.
In fact, this is a merging operation, not a submerging one.