Use "dipped into" in a sentence

1. He dipped into astronomy.

2. He dipped into the future.

3. We all dipped into the box of chocolates.

4. The trail dipped into the dark rain forest.

5. We dipped into The Chronicle’s photo files and discovered Christmas hasn’t changed much

6. These books are intended to be read at length,others to be dipped into.

7. The Lord again dipped into the river. He held out a golden thimble studded with rubies.

8. The strip will be dipped into the acid for a specific number of minutes or seconds.

9. While those being baptized were dipped into the sea, the rest would harmonize in the background with songs.

10. The fish is frozen as soon as it is caught, then cut into thin strips, dipped into a mixture of salt and pepper, and eaten at once.

11. In connection with these establishments some values ofE were measured, in chains, constituted from two inattackable electrodes, dipped into solutions of different concentrations of a salt (of an acid or basis).

12. The ruby is dipped into oils, then covered with powder, embedded on a tile and placed in the oven where it is heated at around 900 °C (1600 °F) for one hour in an oxidizing atmosphere.

13. A large piece of fabric (white cotton cloth) is then dipped into the cold dye bath, swirled around and lifted to help the oxygen change the color of the fabric, a task often performed by volunteers to help the Batikers

14. In 1660, capillary action was still a novelty to the Irish chemist Robert Boyle, when he reported that "some inquisitive French Men" had observed that when a capillary tube was dipped into water, the water would ascend to "some height in the Pipe".

15. Woollen cloth, mordanted with alum, was dyed yellow with dyer's greenweed, then dipped into a vat of blue dye (woad or, later, indigo) to produce the once-famous "Kendal Green" (largely superseded by the brighter "Saxon Green" in the 1770s).

16. Capillary action is a principle that explains why fluids are often drawn up into other substances. This phenomenon is also sometimes described as “Capillarity.” A classic example of this action involves a paper towel and a spilled puddle of water: when the towel is dipped into the water, it sucks the water up.

17. Aspergillum (religion, spiritualism, and occult) A ritual implement used to sprinkle, or "asperge," holy water.This is usually part of a consecration, whether of a human prior to, or as part of, a ritual or of an object, such as a talisman.The Aspergillum is often simply a bundle of herbs, which are dipped into the water and then shaken to dispense the droplets.