-noun1.the act of a person or thing that swims.
2.the skill or technique of a person who swims.
3.the sport of swimming.
-adjective4.pertaining to, characterized by, or capable of swimming.
5.used in or for swimming: swimming trunks.
6.immersed in or overflowing with water or some other liquid.
7.dizzy or giddy: a swimming head.
a floating position on one's back with arms extended out to the sides and face upward.
Having a natatorium in a city such as Las Vegas, Nevada, or Phoenix, Arizona would be awesome. You see, a natatorium is just another term for a swimming pool, particularly one that is indoors.
Swimming can be an adjective, e.g. swimming trunks, or 'a swimming head'. However, it can also be a noun, e.g. 'the sport of swimming', or a verb, 'the boy was swimming'. The present participle of "to swim" it is more technically a gerund used as a noun adjunct. Colloquiallly, a "swimming head" (from a head that is swimming, or confused) is an adjective.
swimming in the ocean. (gerund is swimming) A gerund ends in -ing, and ususally is at the beginning of a sentence
No, it is a verb
The clothing you would wear while swimming is the definition of swimming out.
a tool for swimming
" immersed in or overflowing with water or some other liquid"
un cours de natation
According to Oxford Languages, snorkeling is "The activity or pastime of swimming using a snorkel."
a floating position on one's back with arms extended out to the sides and face upward.
Tourism for a particular reason, ie scuba diving, reef swimming, animal photography etc.
A broad flat limb used for swimming, as those of seals, sea turtles, whales, etc., The hand.
There are tons of different kinds of therapeutic swimming. First of all, the definition. Therapeutic swimming is swimming used for therapeutic purposes. Such as stretching or building a certain muscle. I tore part of my abdominal wall and my therapist had me walk in the shallow end of a pool. It helped me get back the muscles I had lost while laying around in the hospital. Let me know if you need more information. :)
He went swimming in a swimming :)
I was swimmingWe were swimmingYou were swimmingHe/She/It was swimmingThey were swimming
no, swimming is a real sport, syncronised swimming isn't