subterrene

adj

Etymology

From Latin subterrēnus. By surface analysis, sub- + terrene.

  1. borrowed from subterrēnus

Definitions

  1. underground, subterranean

  2. A machine for drilling or tunneling underground.

    • With a deafening screech of metal upon rock—which surely must echo through all the recesses of the Mountain, and waken all its nightmare brood!—the subterrene smashed through the wall and came to rest beside them.
    • In the first field tests, a series of holes 2 inches in diameter and 12 feet deep were sunk with the rock-melting device, or subterrene.
    • … “The beauty of the Subterrene is that, as it burrows through the rock hundreds of feet below the surface, it heats whatever stone it encounters into molten rock, or magma, which cools after the Subterrene has moved on. …

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for subterrene. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA