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    1. plane

      英 [ple?n] 美[plen]
      • n. 飛機(jī);平面;程度,水平
      • vi. 刨;乘飛機(jī)旅行;翱翔
      • vt. 刨平;用刨子刨;掠過水面
      • adj. 平的;平面的
      • n. (Plane)人名;(塞、瑞典、法)普拉內(nèi)

      CET4TEM4GRE考研CET6中高頻詞基本詞匯

      詞態(tài)變化


      復(fù)數(shù):?planes;第三人稱單數(shù):?planes;過去式:?planed;過去分詞:?planed;現(xiàn)在分詞:?planing;

      中文詞源


      plane 飛機(jī)

      縮寫自airplane,飛機(jī)。

      plane 水平,平面,刨平

      來自拉丁語planum,平面,來自PIE*pele,展開,放平,詞源同plain,plan.引申詞義水平,平面,刨平,刨子等諸相關(guān)詞義。

      英文詞源


      plane
      plane: English has five distinct planes, four of which are essentially the same word as plain. These come ultimately from Latin plānus, but preserve its ‘flat’ meanings rather than (like plain) its ‘clear’ meanings. Plane ‘flat surface’ [17] comes from Latin plānum, a noun use of the neuter form of the adjective; it is the plane from which aeroplane, and hence its abbreviation plane, were formed. Plane ‘carpenter’s smoothing tool’ [14] comes via Old French plane from late Latin plāna, a derivative of the verb plānāre ‘make level’, itself a derivative of plānus. Plane ‘flat’ [17] is an alteration of plain, on the model of French plan ‘flat’.

      And plane ‘glide, soar’ [17] comes from French planer, a derivative of plan ‘level surface’ (the underlying notion being of a bird soaring with level wings). The odd man out is plane the tree-name [14], which comes via Old French plane and Latin platanus from Greek plátanos, a derivative of platús ‘broad’ (source of English place, plaice, and platypus) – the reference being to its broad leaves. Platanus probably also underlies English plantain, as applied to the banana-like vegetable.

      => piano, plain; place, plaice, plantain, plate, platypus
      plane (n.1)
      "flat surface," c. 1600, from Latin planum "flat surface, plane, level, plain," noun use of neuter of adjective planus "flat, level, even, plain, clear," from PIE *pla-no- (cognates: Lithuanian plonas "thin;" Celtic *lanon "plain;" perhaps also Greek pelanos "sacrificial cake, a mixture offered to the gods, offering (of meal, honey, and oil) poured or spread"), suffixed form of root *pele- (2) "to spread out; broad, flat" (cognates: Old Church Slavonic polje "flat land, field," Russian polyi "open;" Old English and Old High German feld, Middle Dutch veld "field"). Introduced (perhaps by influence of French plan in this sense) to differentiate the geometrical senses from plain, which in mid-16c. English also meant "geometric plane." Figurative sense is attested from 1850. As an adjective from 1660s.
      plane (n.2)
      1908, short for aeroplane (see airplane).
      plane (n.3)
      "tool for smoothing surfaces," mid-14c., from Old French plane, earlier plaine (14c.), from Late Latin plana, back-formation from planare "make level," from Latin planus "level, flat" (see plane (n.1)).
      plane (v.2)
      "soar, glide on motionless wings," early 15c., from Old French planer "to hover (as a bird), to lie flat," from plan (n.) "plane," from Latin planum "flat surface" (see plane (n.1)), on notion of bird gliding with flattened wings. Of boats, etc., "to skim over the surface of water," it is first found 1913. Related: Planed; planing.
      plane (n.4)
      "tree of the genus Platanus," late 14c., from Old French plane, earlier plasne (14c.), from Latin platanus, from Greek platanos, earlier platanistos "plane tree," a species from Asia Minor, associated with platys "broad" (see plaice (n.)), in reference to its leaves. Applied since 1778 in Scotland and northern England to the sycamore, whose leaves somewhat resemble those of the true plane tree.
      plane (v.1)
      "to make smooth," early 14c., "to gloss over, explain away;" mid-14c. as "to make smooth or even," from Old French planer "to smooth, level off; wipe away, erase" (12c.), from Late Latin planare "make level," from Latin planus "level, flat" (see plane (n.1)). In early use in English often plain. Related: Planed; planing.

      雙語例句


      1. The plane has been kept in service far longer than originally intended.
      這架飛機(jī)已經(jīng)超期服役很長時(shí)間了。

      來自柯林斯例句

      2. He noticed that fabric was tearing away from the plane's wing.
      他注意到機(jī)翼在一塊一塊地?cái)嗔选?/dd>

      來自柯林斯例句

      3. The plane had been cleared for landing at Brunswick's Glynco Airport.
      飛機(jī)獲準(zhǔn)降落于不倫瑞克的格林科機(jī)場。

      來自柯林斯例句

      4. She walked off the plane in a miniskirt and tight top.
      她身穿迷你裙和緊身上衣走下了飛機(jī)。

      來自柯林斯例句

      5. The missiles emerge from the underbelly of the transport plane.
      導(dǎo)彈從那架運(yùn)輸機(jī)的底部飛了出來。

      來自柯林斯例句