¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Buoyancies
1. buoyancy [n] - See also: buoyancy
Lexicographical Neighbors of Buoyancies
Literary usage of Buoyancies
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Notes on Construction in Mild Steel: Arranged for the Use of Junior by Henry Fidler (1907)
"... in accordance with the size and total height of the structure, is desirable;
that is to say, that the centre of combined buoyancies (CB) shall be from 1 ..."
2. Notes on Construction in Mild Steel: Arranged for the Use of Junior by Henry Fidler (1907)
"... from those governing transverse strength, being ruled by the required buoyancies,
and the influences of tidal levels, which will vary with every port. ..."
3. Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute by United States Naval Institute (1888)
"If we compare two boats exactly similar in displacement, lines, total power
developed, and with buoyancies measured by the power applied through down haul ..."
4. The Critic and the Drama by George Jean Nathan (1922)
"... Madonna della Misericordia, and Joseph Conrad's "Youth" than in the easy
buoyancies of John Philip Sousa, Howard Chandler Christy and Rupert Hughes. ..."
5. Authors and I by Charles Lewis Hind (1921)
"Henry Adams could appreciate exuberant buoyancies like the young Rudyard Kipling,
but after the contact he would at once glide back into the easy grooves of ..."
6. American Lands and Letters by Donald Grant Mitchell (1904)
"It would seem as if — in the early thirties— the buoyancies of youth had fallen
away from him ; his poor mother ..."
7. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and (1921)
"... viscosities of oils, buoyancies of oils and gases in water-saturated sands,
expansive forces of compressed gases in sands, capillary forces, ..."