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ocean
[ oh-shuhn ]
noun
- any part of or the entirety of salt water that covers more than 70 percent of the earth's surface: Compare World Ocean ( def ).
Most of her adult life had been spent on the ocean, first on a fishing boat, then in the navy, now as a marine biologist.
- a vast expanse or quantity:
oceans of opportunity;
the ocean of people at Woodstock.
ocean
/ ˈəʊʃə /
noun
- a very large stretch of sea, esp one of the five oceans of the world, the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Antarctic
- the body of salt water covering approximately 70 per cent of the earth's surface
- a huge quantity or expanse
an ocean of replies
- literary.the sea
ocean
- The continuous body of salt water that covers 72 percent of the Earth's surface. The average salinity of ocean water is approximately three percent. The deepest known area of the ocean, at 11,034 m (36,192 ft) is the Mariana Trench , located in the western Pacific Ocean.
- Any of the principal divisions of this body of water, including the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, and Arctic Oceans.
Other Word Forms
- ·· adjective
- ·ٱ·· adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of ocean1
Usage
Example Sentences
Under NOAA, which was established by President Richard Nixon in 1970, the lab advanced early forecasting, using sensors in the oceans and the sky.
Officials need a long-term plan to move this important service to stable ground away from the ocean’s edge.
Investigators hope it will help them determine how the Palisades fire ignited, the exact point of origin, and how, during a massive windstorm, it raced from the hills to the ocean.
Band leader Wallace Hartley and his fellow musicians were all killed along with more than 1,500 others after the ocean liner hit an iceberg in the North Atlantic in 1912.
He later wrote the book The Truth About The Titanic, recalling his experience onboard the doomed ocean liner.
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