...swim just means, generally, to travel through water.
and what about 'boating', 'sailing', 'snorkeling', and 'diving'?
CaptFalcon33035 abbledb:
...swim just means, generally, to travel through water. and what about 'boating', 'sailing', 'snorkeling', and 'diving'? |
CaptFalcon33035 wrote:
I wasn't looking at the directions. :P Would you say a ship swims? Because I would say a ship floats. Swimming refers rather specifically to getting your body in the water up to neck height and using all of your limbs and your back to drive yourself through the water. Dictionary.com agrees: the first definition refers to paddling movement, and the second definition refers more to the idea of an inert object (such as "an ice cube swimming in a cocktail"). Even ducks don't swim unless they're chasing down a fish for supper: they "paddle" while they "float". |
I disagree. Swimming means moving yourself through the water under your own power, without assistance such as boats.