Glimpse vs Plane - What's the difference?
glimpse | plane |
A brief look, glance, or peek.
:
*(Samuel Rogers) (1763-1855)
*:Here hid by shrub wood, there by glimpses seen.
*
*:Selwyn, sitting up rumpled and cross-legged on the floor, after having boloed Drina to everybody's exquisite satisfaction, looked around at the sudden rustle of skirts to catch a glimpse of a vanishing figure—a glimmer of ruddy hair and the white curve of a youthful face, half-buried in a muff.
A sudden flash.
*(John Milton) (1608-1674)
*:Light as the lightning glimpse they ran.
A faint idea; an inkling.
To see or view briefly or incompletely.
To appear by glimpses.
Of a surface: flat or level.
A level or flat surface.
(geometry) A flat surface extending infinitely in all directions (e.g. horizontal or vertical plane).
A level of existence or development. (eg'', ''astral plane )
A roughly flat, thin, often moveable structure used to create lateral force by the flow of air or water over its surface, found on aircraft, submarines, etc.
(computing, Unicode) Any of a number of designated ranges of sequential code points.
(anatomy) An imaginary plane which divides the body into two portions.
To smooth (wood) with a plane.
An airplane; an aeroplane.
* {{quote-magazine, date=2013-09-06, author=Tom Cheshire
, volume=189, issue=13, page=34, magazine=(The Guardian Weekly)
, title= (nautical) To move in a way that lifts the bow of a boat out of the water.
To glide or soar.
(senseid)(countable) A deciduous tree of the genus Platanus .
(Northern UK) A sycamore.
As nouns the difference between glimpse and plane
is that glimpse is a brief look, glance, or peek while plane is (label) the thing, the point, the interesting thing, the main interest in something, unusualness, speciality.As a verb glimpse
is to see or view briefly or incompletely.As an adverb plane is
(label) particularly, especially, certainly.glimpse
English
Noun
(en noun)Verb
(glimps)- I have only begun to glimpse the magnitude of the problem.
- (Drayton)
Synonyms
* perceive, notice, detect, spot, catch sight ofplane
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) . The word was introduced in the seventeenth century to distinguish the geometrical senses from the other senses of plain.Adjective
(er)Noun
(en noun)Hyponyms
* (mathematics) real plane, complex plane * (anatomy) coronal plane, frontal plane, sagittal plane, transverse planeDerived terms
*Etymology 2
From (etyl), from (etyl), from (etyl), fromSee also
* rhykenologistVerb
(plan)Etymology 3
Abbreviated from aeroplane .Noun
(en noun)Solar-powered travel, passage=The plane is travelling impossibly slowly – 30km an hour – when it gently noses up and leaves the ground. With air beneath them, the rangy wings seem to gain strength; the fuselage that on the ground seemed flimsy becomes elegant, like a crane vaunting in flight. It seems not to fly, though, so much as float.}}
