submersible vs wide

submersible

adj
  • Able to be submerged. 

noun
  • A small nonmilitary, non-nuclear submarine for exploration. 

  • A term used primarily by some navies for nuclear submarines, termed "true submersibles", because they cannot retroactively declare that their non-nuclear submarines should be called by a different name. 

  • A very small "baby" submarine designed for specific localized missions, usually while tethered to a submarine or ship for life support and communications. Slang synonyms: midget-submarine, anchor. 

  • A retroactive term used for non-nuclear submarines; nuclear submarines are termed "true submarines". 

wide

adj
  • Having a large physical extent from side to side. 

  • Of or supporting a greater range of text characters than can fit into the traditional 8-bit representation. 

  • Antagonistic, provocative. 

  • Operating at the side of the playing area. 

  • Large in scope. 

  • On one side or the other of the mark; too far sideways from the mark, the wicket, the batsman, etc. 

noun
  • A ball that passes so far from the batsman that the umpire deems it unplayable; the arm signal used by an umpire to signal a wide; the extra run added to the batting side's score 

adv
  • away from or to one side of a given goal 

  • completely 

  • extensively 

  • So as to leave or have a great space between the sides; so as to form a large opening. 

How often have the words submersible and wide occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )