different between flight vs stringpiece
flight
English
Pronunciation
- enPR: fl?t, IPA(key): /fla?t/
- Rhymes: -a?t
Etymology 1
From Middle English flight, from Old English flyht (“flight”), from Proto-Germanic *fluhtiz (“flight”), derived from *fleugan? (“to fly”), from Proto-Indo-European *plewk- (“to fly”), enlargement of *plew- (“flow”). Analyzable as fly +? -t (variant of -th). Cognate with West Frisian flecht (“flight”), Dutch vlucht (“flight”), German Flucht (“flight”) (etymology 2).
Noun
flight (countable and uncountable, plural flights)
- The act of flying.
- An instance of flying.
- (collective) A collective term for doves or swallows.
- A trip made by an aircraft, particularly one between two cities or countries, which is often planned or reserved in advance.
- A series of stairs between landings.
- A group of canal locks with a short distance between them
- A floor which is reached by stairs or escalators.
- The feathers on an arrow or dart used to help it follow an even path.
- A paper plane.
- (cricket) The movement of a spinning ball through the air - concerns its speed, trajectory and drift.
- The ballistic trajectory of an arrow or other projectile.
- An aerodynamic surface designed to guide such a projectile's trajectory.
- An air force unit.
- Several sample glasses of a specific wine varietal or other beverage. The pours are smaller than a full glass and the flight will generally include three to five different samples.
- (engineering) The shaped material forming the thread of a screw.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
Adjective
flight (comparative more flight, superlative most flight)
- (obsolete) Fast, swift, fleet.
Verb
flight (third-person singular simple present flights, present participle flighting, simple past and past participle flighted)
- (cricket, of a spin bowler) To throw the ball in such a way that it has more airtime and more spin than usual.
- (sports, by extension, transitive) To throw or kick something so as to send it flying with more loft or airtime than usual.
See also
Appendix:English collective nouns
Etymology 2
From Middle English, from Old English flyht, from Proto-Germanic *fluhtiz, derived from *fleuhan? (“to flee”). Analyzable as flee +? -t (variant of -th). Cognate with Dutch vlucht, German Flucht (etymology 1).
Noun
flight (countable and uncountable, plural flights)
- The act of fleeing.
- take flight
- the flight of a refugee
Related terms
- flee
Translations
Middle English
Etymology
From Old English flyht.
Noun
flight (plural flights)
- flight (act of flying)
flight From the web:
- what flights are above me
- what flight hit the twin towers
- what flights are $49 on southwest
- what flights are overhead
- what flight is my package on fedex
- what flights require covid test
- what flight went missing
- what flights are cheap right now
stringpiece
English
Etymology
string +? piece
Noun
stringpiece (plural stringpieces)
- (architecture) A long piece of timber, forming a margin or edge of any piece of construction; especially one of the longitudinal pieces supporting a flight or run of stairs.
Translations
stringpiece From the web:
you may also like
- flight vs stringpiece
- stair vs stringpiece
- ringpiece vs taxonomy
- terms vs stringpiece
- heart vs dextrocardia
- heart vs transcardial
- heart vs abdominocardiac
- cardiacmuscle vs heartmuscle
- cardiacfailure vs heartattack
- cardiac vs heartbeat
- adaptionists vs adoptionists
- adopt vs nonadopter
- adopter vs adopted
- nonadopter vs nonadopted
- adoptors vs adopters
- adoptor vs adopter
- adapters vs adopters
- unemployableness vs taxonomy
- employable vs taxonomy
- selfward vs shelfward