Yes. Scuba is both an acronym and a word.
A group of words can be:a sentencea paragraphan essaya lettera storya poema mottoan expressiona sayinga dictionary
There are no legal requirements to scuba dive. In other words, anyone can scuba dive without breaking a law (assuming you are not doing an illegal underwater activity such as illegal fishing). However, if you are not certified, you will not be able to rent or buy equipment or get someone to fill your scuba cylinder.
Aliquam pugna diver is "combat scuba diver" in Latin. The Latin word pugna actually means fighter. Since Latin is a dead language and very old, the words are not exactly translated.
Either, depending on context. Usually, if used as a noun it is SCUBA; as an adjective, as in scuba diver, it is just scuba.
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Scuba diving.
A scuba diver is a human who enjoys scuba diving. Therefore, a scuba diver has a spine and is a vertebrate.
No, but "scuba-diving" is a verb.
'SCUBA' is a noun, referring to the breathing apparatus. 'SCUBA dive' is the verb, with 'SCUBA dived' as the past-tense form.
It's an acronym: Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus = SCUBA (not scuba)
Scuba was invented by the navy.