drown - meaning and definition. What is drown
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What (who) is drown - definition

RESPIRATORY IMPAIRMENT CAUSED BY SUBMERSION IN LIQUID CAUSING DEATH
Drown; Near drowning; Secondary drowning; Drowned; Dry drowning; Near-drowning; Delayed drowning; Drowning Man; Racing against the tide; Drowns; Death at sea; Champignon de mousse; Drownded; Draft:Drowning
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  • Chest compressions
  • Children have drowned in buckets and toilets.
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  • Rescue breaths
  • Lifejacket (model without rear part). To jump with it into the water, fasten the strap around the body and grab the front neck area with both hands.
  • Hoop-buoy in a boat.
  • Drain hole in a pool.
  • Advice given to would-be rescuers of a drowning victim
  • Water rescue (simulation). The rescuer has already controlled the position of an anxious victim and then begins the towing to shore choosing a backstroke style. The victim's nose and mouth are kept above the water.

drown         
CROSS-PROTOCOL ATTACK AGAINST TLS USING THE SSLV2 PROTOCOL
DROWN; Drown attack; CVE-2016-0800
¦ verb
1. die or kill through submersion in water.
2. submerge or flood (an area).
3. (usu. drown something out) make inaudible by being much louder.
Phrases
drown one's sorrows forget one's problems by getting drunk.
Origin
ME (orig. northern): related to ON drukkna 'to be drowned', also to drink.
drown         
CROSS-PROTOCOL ATTACK AGAINST TLS USING THE SSLV2 PROTOCOL
DROWN; Drown attack; CVE-2016-0800
I. v. a.
1.
Suffocate in water.
2.
Overflow, inundate, deluge, overwhelm, flood.
3.
Overcome, overpower.
II. v. n.
Be drowned.
drown         
CROSS-PROTOCOL ATTACK AGAINST TLS USING THE SSLV2 PROTOCOL
DROWN; Drown attack; CVE-2016-0800
(drowns, drowning, drowned)
1.
When someone drowns or is drowned, they die because they have gone or been pushed under water and cannot breathe.
A child can drown in only a few inches of water...
Last night a boy was drowned in the river...
He walked into the sea and drowned himself...
Dolphins have sometimes been known to save drowning swimmers.
VERB: V, be V-ed, V pron-refl, V-ing
2.
If you say that a person or thing is drowning in something, you are emphasizing that they have a very large amount of it, or are completely covered in it.
...people who gradually find themselves drowning in debt...
The potatoes were drowned in chilli.
VERB: V in n, be V-ed [emphasis]
3.
If something drowns a sound, it is so loud that you cannot hear that sound properly.
Clapping drowned the speaker's words for a moment...
VERB: V n
Drown out means the same as drown.
Their cheers drowned out the protests of demonstrators...
PHRASAL VERB: V P n (not pron)
4.
If you say that someone is drowning their sorrows, you mean that they are drinking alcohol in order to forget something sad or upsetting that has happened to them.
PHRASE: V inflects

Wikipedia

Drowning

Drowning is a type of suffocation induced by the submersion of the mouth and nose in a liquid. Most instances of fatal drowning occur alone or in situations where others present are either unaware of the victim's situation or unable to offer assistance. After successful resuscitation, drowning victims may experience breathing problems, vomiting, confusion, or unconsciousness. Occasionally, victims may not begin experiencing these symptoms until several hours after they are rescued. An incident of drowning can also cause further complications for victims due to low body temperature, aspiration of vomit, or acute respiratory distress syndrome (respiratory failure from lung inflammation).

Drowning is more likely to happen when spending extended periods of time near large bodies of water. Risk factors for drowning include alcohol use, drug use, epilepsy, minimal swim training or a complete lack of training, and, in the case of children, a lack of supervision. Common drowning locations include natural and man-made bodies of water, bathtubs, and swimming pools.

Drowning occurs when a person spends too much time with their nose and mouth submerged in a liquid to the point of being unable to breathe. If this is not followed by an exit to the surface, low oxygen levels and excess carbon dioxide in the blood trigger a neurological state of breathing emergency, which results in increased physical distress and occasional contractions of the vocal folds. Significant amounts of water usually only enter the lungs later in the process.

While the word "drowning" is commonly associated with fatal results, drowning may be classified into three different types: drowning that results in death, drowning that results in long-lasting health problems, and drowning that results in no health complications. Sometimes the term "near-drowning" is used in the latter cases. Among children who survive, health problems occur in about 7.5% of cases.

Steps to prevent drowning include teaching children and adults to swim and to recognise unsafe water conditions, never swimming alone, use of personal flotation devices on boats and when swimming in unfavourable conditions, limiting or removing access to water (such as with fencing of swimming pools), and exercising appropriate supervision. Treatment of victims who are not breathing should begin with opening the airway and providing five breaths of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) is recommended for a person whose heart has stopped beating and has been underwater for less than an hour.

Examples of use of drown
1. Water, look at all the people who drown every year.
2. Weighed down by his armor, he thought he would drown.
3. "This will just drown them in a spiral of debits.
4. They sang neither in celebration nor to drown their sorrows.
5. Brass bands hired by Republicans and Democrats struggled to drown each other out.