: any of a genus (Platanus of the family Platanaceae, the plane-tree family) of chiefly deciduous trees with large palmately lobed leaves, flowers in globose heads, and usually scaling bark
level, flat, plane, even, smooth mean having a surface without bends, curves, or irregularities.
level applies to a horizontal surface that lies on a line parallel with the horizon.
the vast prairies are nearly level
flat applies to a surface devoid of noticeable curvatures, prominences, or depressions.
the work surface must be flat
plane applies to any real or imaginary flat surface in which a straight line between any two points on it lies wholly within that surface.
the plane sides of a crystal
even applies to a surface that is noticeably flat or level or to a line that is observably straight.
trim the hedge so it is even
smooth applies especially to a polished surface free of irregularities.
a smooth skating rink
Examples of plane in a Sentence
Noun (1)
a plane flew overhead Verb (1)planed the wood for the picnic table perfectly smooth so that no one would get splintersVerb (2)
an eagle planed effortlessly overhead, gliding on an air current Adjective
you can do these tracings on any plane surface
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Noun
Video shot by a passenger aboard the plane and shared with CBS News shows smoke in the cabin of the aircraft.—Kerry Breen, CBS News, 9 May 2026 According to a letter sent by the Dutch foreign and health ministers to parliament late Friday, Spain has activated the EU civil protection mechanism for a medical evacuation plane equipped for infectious diseases to be on standby in case anyone on the ship becomes ill.—Iain Sullivan, Los Angeles Times, 9 May 2026 If signed into law, the measure would generally prohibit companies from using the mountains of data collected on consumers to set individualized prices on items like groceries, plane tickets and electronics.—The Denver Post, Denver Post, 9 May 2026 According to reports, the individual was at least partially sucked into one of the plane’s jet engines.—Jessica Schladebeck, New York Daily News, 9 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for plane
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Latin planum, from neuter of planus level
Verb (1)
Middle English, from Anglo-French planer, from Late Latin planare, from Latin planus level — more at floor
Noun (2)
Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Late Latin plana, from planare
Noun (3)
Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin platanus, from Greek platanos; probably akin to Greek platys broad — more at place
Verb (2)
Middle English, from Middle French planer, from plain level, plain
Middle English planen "to make smooth or level," from early French planer (same meaning), derived from Latin planus "level" — related to plainentry 1
Adjective
from Latin planus "level"
Verb
from French planer "to fly while keeping the wings motionless," from plain "level, plain"; so called from the fact that the wings of a soaring bird form a level surface
: a surface that contains at least three points not all in a straight line and is such that a line drawn through any two points in it lies wholly in the surface