window pane


Also found in: Thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.window pane - street name for lysergic acid diethylamidewindow pane - street name for lysergic acid diethylamide
LSD, lysergic acid diethylamide - a powerful hallucinogenic drug manufactured from lysergic acid
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
Translations
okenní tabule
rude
ikkunalasi
okno
窓ガラス
창유리
fönsterruta
กระจกหน้าต่าง
ô kính cửa sổ

window pane

nvetro
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

window pane

لَوْحٌ زُجَاجِيّ okenní tabule rude Fensterscheibe τζάμι παραθύρου cristal de la ventana ikkunalasi vitre okno lastra di vetro 窓ガラス 창유리 ruit vindusrute szyba okienna vidraça оконное стекло fönsterruta กระจกหน้าต่าง pencere camı ô kính cửa sổ 窗玻璃
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
References in classic literature ?
She passed the paper knife over the window pane, then laid its smooth, cool surface to her cheek, and almost laughed aloud at the feeling of delight that all at once without cause came over her.
A fly flew up suddenly and struck the window pane with a plaintive buzz.
Only a big fly buzzed and fluttered against the window pane. It was unbearable at last.
So she bade Miss Wilson adieu; and the bee on the window pane was heard no more at Alton College.
With another he tapped Eric on the head; and, with a third broad swing, ere the other could recover himself, he swept him clear off the stage, much as you would brush a fly off the window pane.
A window pane was smashed while a fridge had been tipped over in the shop.
Judge Desmond Marrinan was told Donegan, from Carnhill in the city, and an unnamed accomplice managed to remove intact a window pane but fled when they were disturbed by the house occupants.
David Meadows, 45, of no fixed address, had been arrested on Saturday after smashing a window pane to get into the caravan on a street in Llandudno.
This roomful of existential optics would be unthinkable without Dickinson's work, to which Finch alludes in the show's title, "As much of noon as I can take between my finite eyes." This line is culled from a poem in which Dickinson describes peering "upon the window pane" to the world beyond, at once evoking Emerson's transcendental "transparent eyeball" and Thoreau's allegory of the mutable pond wherein a sheet of frozen ice produces and sustains a reflection before ceding to wintry gray opacity.
NEW YORK-There's something immensely appealing about rugs with large blocks of color, perhaps because they're reminiscent of a child's toy blocks or a window pane of colored glass.
A weather watcher's proverb for frostworks might be: "When frostworks on the window pane grow; the temps tonight will drop mighty low.