: a movable device attached to an elevated object (such as a spire) for showing the direction of the wind
b
: one that is changeable or inconstant
2
: a thin flat or curved object that is rotated about an axis by a flow of fluid or that rotates to cause a fluid to flow or that redirects a flow of fluid
: a feather fastened to the shaft near the nock of an arrow
Examples of vane in a Sentence
the vanes of a windmill
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Slide the lever or turn the dial on the vent to open the register's vanes.—Lee Wallender, The Spruce, 26 Jan. 2026 This 350-piece building set is inspired by the iconic scene from The Sorcerer’s Stone and has all of its memorable details, including the wind vane and Trevor’s hiding place.—Sian Babish, PEOPLE, 30 Nov. 2025 Small rubber bumps protruding from one vane spanned the inlet, preventing the vanes from collapsing together when vacuum was applied.—IEEE Spectrum, 15 Oct. 2025 The counter-rotating rotors remove the need for a tail rotor, while adjustable tail vanes provide smooth yaw control by catching the airflow.—Sujita Sinha, Interesting Engineering, 21 Sep. 2025 See All Example Sentences for vane
Word History
Etymology
Middle English fane, vane "flag, pennant, weather vane," going back to Old English fana, fane (masculine or feminine weak noun) "banner, standard, kind of iris," going back to Germanic *fanōn (whence also Old Frisian fona, fana "flag," Old Saxon fano "cloth, cloak, flag," Middle Dutch vane, vaen "flag," Old High German fano "cloth, cloak, ribbon, flag," Old Icelandic fani "banner," Gothic fana "piece of cloth, rag"), perhaps a borrowing from the same source as Latin pannus "piece of cloth, rag"
Note:
In the sense "banner, flag" Old English fana, Old Saxon fano, etc., are probably shortenings of Old English gūþfana, Old Saxon gūthfano, etc., "battle standard, banner"—see gonfalon. —The Germanic and Latin etyma have also been associated with Greek pḗnē "thread on the spool or bobbin that will form the weft" (also pēníon, Doric pāníon "spool, bobbin," and pênos, glossed "web" by Hesychius), though the senses appear too remote to be comparable. G. Kroonen suggests that the forms might be unified by positing an original ablauting n-stem *p(é)h2-ōn, genitive *ph2-n-ós, with the Germanic word being the outcome of a generalized stem *ph2-no- or *peh2-nó-, with shortening by Dybo's Law (shortening of long vowels before an accented syllable beginning with a resonant). Latin pannum could be relatable if it was the outcome of the littera-rule (V:C > VCC). A problem here, however, is that there appear to be no other cases of the littera-rule operating in Latin before a nasal consonant—and, in any case, there are no examples of *pānus. Germanic *fanōn and Latin pannus are perhaps to be considered loanwords from an unknown source.
: a movable device attached to something high to show which way the wind is blowing
2
: a thin flat or curved object that is rotated about an axis by a flow of fluid (as air or water) or that rotates to cause a fluid to flow or that changes the direction of a flow of fluid