释义 |
WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2024glide /glaɪd/USA pronunciation v., glid•ed, glid•ing, n. v. - to move smoothly, as if without effort:[no object]skaters gliding over the ice.
- (of time) to elapse in a gradual way that goes unnoticed:[no object]The years glided by.
- to move quietly or without being noticed:[no object]He glided noiselessly into the room.
- Aeronautics
- to move in the air, esp. at an easy angle downward, with little or no engine power: [no object]The plane glided toward the runway.[~ + object]The pilot glided the plane to a safe landing.
- [no object] to fly in a glider.
n. [countable] - a gliding movement, as in dancing.
- an act or instance of gliding.
WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2024glide (glīd),USA pronunciation v., glid•ed, glid•ing, n. v.i. - to move smoothly and continuously along, as if without effort or resistance, as a flying bird, a boat, or a skater.
- to pass by gradual or unobservable change (often fol. by along, away, by, etc.).
- to move quietly or stealthily or without being noticed (usually fol. by in, out, along, etc.).
- Aeronautics
- to move in the air, esp. at an easy angle downward, with less engine power than for level flight, solely by the action of air currents and gravity, or by momentum already acquired.
- to fly in a glider.
- Music and Danceto pass from one note to another without a break.
v.t. - to cause to glide.
n. - a gliding movement, as in dancing.
- Music and Dancea dance marked by such movements.
- Music and Danceslur (def. 10a).
- Phonetics
- a speech sound having the characteristics of both a consonant and a vowel, esp. w in wore and y in your, and, in some analyses, r in road and l in load;
semivowel. - a transitional sound heard during the articulation linking two phonemically contiguous sounds, as the y- sound often heard between the i and e of quiet.
- a calm stretch of shallow, smoothly flowing water, as in a river.
- an act or instance of gliding.
- Metallurgyslip1 (def. 56).
- a smooth metal plate, as on the bottom of the feet of a chair or table, to facilitate moving and to prevent scarring of floor surfaces.
- a metal track in which a drawer, shelf, etc., moves in or out.
- bef. 900; Middle English gliden (verb, verbal), Old English glīdan; cognate with German gleiten
glid′ing•ly, adv. - 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged flow. See slide.
- 1.See corresponding entry in Unabridged stick.
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