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glider

[ glahy-der ]

noun

  1. a motorless, heavier-than-air aircraft for gliding from a higher to a lower level by the action of gravity or from a lower to a higher level by the action of air currents.
  2. a porch swing made of an upholstered seat suspended from a steel framework by links or springs.
  3. a person or thing that glides.
  4. a person who pilots a glider.


glider

/ ˈɡlaɪdə /

noun

  1. an aircraft capable of gliding and soaring in air currents without the use of an engine See also sailplane
  2. a person or thing that glides
  3. another name for flying phalanger


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Word History and Origins

Origin of glider1

late Middle English word dating back to 1400–50; glide, -er 1

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Example Sentences

Occasionally someone climbed over it or crashed through it or dug under it, or made himself a glider and flew through it.

I especially enjoy the scene where he uses a kite as a hang-glider.

You go in a rocket-powered glider, shoot up for 60 miles, and fall down for five minutes, so it gives you a simulated zero-G.

Lilienthal, “the Glider King,” was the first person to make repeated, successful flights on a glider.

The Daily Beast rounds up seven more, from the Glider King to the flying taxi inventor.

Thus is the Aeroplane "nose-heavy" as a glider, and just so to a degree ensuring a speed of glide equal to its flying speed.

Meanwhile I made a lot of turn-table and glider models and started in upon an idea of combining gas-bags and gliders.

It is also the principle which governs the airplane or glider, whose planes are kept at a definite angle to the air current.

For where the biplane has an intricate control system, Lilienthal relied entirely upon his own body to operate his glider.

Pilcher adopted an even more original scheme for making his glider “go.”

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