释义 |
Definition of pane in English: panenoun peɪnpeɪn 1A single sheet of glass in a window or door. Example sentencesExamples - Earlier in the day, my oldest brother had accidentally broken one of the glass panes in our kitchen door, which my mother had temporarily patched with a flap from a cardboard box.
- When I saw the painting, strangely executed on the upper glass panes of a door, I was spellbound.
- If your door has glass panes, are they properly glazed?
- Doors are now large panes of glass with unobstructed views of the beach.
- They had a row and he left and at Brown Street kicked a door and broke a pane of glass.
- The glass pane on the door and every window were reduced to tiny fragments.
- Mrs Platt said glass panes in the door of another Church Street shop had also been damaged in the same way.
- When they entered the wooden doors with glass panes, a young teenage man with spiky blond hair and a cute grin greeted them.
- Doors with glass panes require a double-cylinder deadbolt to prevent someone from breaking the glass, reaching in and unlocking the door.
- Glass panes in select cabinet doors show vintage dishware; others bear fabric and chicken-wire inserts.
- When single panes of toughened glass are used overhead such failure can have dangerous consequences.
- Roberts then appeared in the kitchen having smashed the glass pane in her door and removed the security chain.
- There are two long, narrow windows and a walkout door with glass panes to a deck in the bedroom
- A MAN who pleaded to causing damage to a door and breaking two panes of glass at a house was ordered to compensate the owner, at the November 22 sitting of Carlow District Court.
- Rather than foregrounding a central object when I gaze into a store window, I become interested instead in all that a single pane of glass can contain.
- And better yet, the top half of the door was a large pane of glass that gave him a great view of the kitchen.
- In the central image, the girl sits on the top steps, the glass panes in the front door visible behind her.
- The entire outside wall was a single pane of glass, covered only by a lacy curtain.
- It is still out of bounds, its ghostly emptiness - whole streets without a single pane of glass intact - telling its own poignant story.
- It could have been easily mistaken for a mall, with its multi-story commercial looking structure and the massive glass panes and doors.
Synonyms sheet of glass, panel, windowpane - 1.1Computing A separate defined area within a window for the display of, or interaction with, a specified part of that window's application or output.
Example sentencesExamples - Once you have added all the keywords in the right pane which are applicable for your site, click on the next keyword in the left pane which is applicable for your site.
- Your search and results panes can be resized and customized to whatever layout you find appropriate.
- You should now see the audio tracks displayed on the right pane of the software window.
- You are given a molecule, displayed in the right-hand pane, with its component atoms scattered in a maze of sorts.
- Click on a file in any of 220 formats and it will be displayed in the viewer pane.
- As an example, here are images of the panes of a computer using a standard USB keyboard and mouse, and one using a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse connection.
- The browser has unique features, including the ability to split the window into panes, with each pane displaying different web sites or even a web site and the contents of a local directory.
- It has some great features, including tabbed documents and a multi-pane screen with the ability to keep notes in a separate pane.
- The View tab under the Settings menu allows you to add or remove items displayed on the Task pane.
- By dividing your main window with a set of vertical panes, you can resize this window, if you like.
2A sheet or page of stamps. Example sentencesExamples - In 1958, the Post Office ceased the practice as collectors were purchasing only the plate blocks, leaving broken panes of stamps in post offices.
- Each booklet contained a pane of 10 37c stamps from the current definitive range.
- This cover bears a pane of nine stamps from the Wedgwood £3 book of stamps and is unaddressed.
- The pane of 24 stamps also contained 24 connecting tabs in 12 designs.
Origin Late Middle English (originally denoting a piece of something, such as a fence or strip of cloth): from Old French pan, from Latin pannus 'piece of cloth'. A pane was originally a section or piece of something, such as a fence or strip of cloth. The word comes from Old French pan, from Latin pannus ‘piece of cloth’. The sense ‘division of a window’ is found from the mid 15th century. Panel (Middle English) comes from the same root. The early sense ‘piece of parchment’ was extended to mean ‘list’, particularly a jury; this led to the notion ‘advisory group’.
Rhymes abstain, appertain, arcane, arraign, ascertain, attain, Bahrain, bane, blain, brain, Braine, Cain, Caine, campaign, cane, cinquain, chain, champagne, champaign, Champlain, Charmaine, chicane, chow mein, cocaine, Coleraine, Coltrane, complain, constrain, contain, crane, Dane, deign, demesne, demi-mondaine, detain, disdain, domain, domaine, drain, Duane, Dwane, Elaine, entertain, entrain, explain, fain, fane, feign, gain, Germaine, germane, grain, humane, Hussein, inane, Jain, Jane, Jermaine, Kane, La Fontaine, lain, lane, legerdemain, Lorraine, main, Maine, maintain, mane, mise en scène, Montaigne, moraine, mundane, obtain, ordain, Paine, pertain, plain, plane, Port-of-Spain, profane, rain, Raine, refrain, reign, rein, retain, romaine, sane, Seine, Shane, Sinn Fein, skein, slain, Spain, Spillane, sprain, stain, strain, sustain, swain, terrain, thane, train, twain, Ujjain, Ukraine, underlain, urbane, vain, vane, vein, Verlaine, vicereine, wain, wane, Wayne Definition of pane in US English: panenounpeɪnpān 1A single sheet of glass in a window or door. Example sentencesExamples - Roberts then appeared in the kitchen having smashed the glass pane in her door and removed the security chain.
- The entire outside wall was a single pane of glass, covered only by a lacy curtain.
- It could have been easily mistaken for a mall, with its multi-story commercial looking structure and the massive glass panes and doors.
- Doors are now large panes of glass with unobstructed views of the beach.
- In the central image, the girl sits on the top steps, the glass panes in the front door visible behind her.
- Glass panes in select cabinet doors show vintage dishware; others bear fabric and chicken-wire inserts.
- The glass pane on the door and every window were reduced to tiny fragments.
- They had a row and he left and at Brown Street kicked a door and broke a pane of glass.
- When single panes of toughened glass are used overhead such failure can have dangerous consequences.
- When I saw the painting, strangely executed on the upper glass panes of a door, I was spellbound.
- Earlier in the day, my oldest brother had accidentally broken one of the glass panes in our kitchen door, which my mother had temporarily patched with a flap from a cardboard box.
- Doors with glass panes require a double-cylinder deadbolt to prevent someone from breaking the glass, reaching in and unlocking the door.
- When they entered the wooden doors with glass panes, a young teenage man with spiky blond hair and a cute grin greeted them.
- And better yet, the top half of the door was a large pane of glass that gave him a great view of the kitchen.
- It is still out of bounds, its ghostly emptiness - whole streets without a single pane of glass intact - telling its own poignant story.
- Mrs Platt said glass panes in the door of another Church Street shop had also been damaged in the same way.
- There are two long, narrow windows and a walkout door with glass panes to a deck in the bedroom
- A MAN who pleaded to causing damage to a door and breaking two panes of glass at a house was ordered to compensate the owner, at the November 22 sitting of Carlow District Court.
- If your door has glass panes, are they properly glazed?
- Rather than foregrounding a central object when I gaze into a store window, I become interested instead in all that a single pane of glass can contain.
Synonyms sheet of glass, panel, windowpane - 1.1Computing A separate defined area within a window for the display of, or interaction with, a part of that window's application or output.
Example sentencesExamples - As an example, here are images of the panes of a computer using a standard USB keyboard and mouse, and one using a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse connection.
- The browser has unique features, including the ability to split the window into panes, with each pane displaying different web sites or even a web site and the contents of a local directory.
- You should now see the audio tracks displayed on the right pane of the software window.
- By dividing your main window with a set of vertical panes, you can resize this window, if you like.
- It has some great features, including tabbed documents and a multi-pane screen with the ability to keep notes in a separate pane.
- The View tab under the Settings menu allows you to add or remove items displayed on the Task pane.
- You are given a molecule, displayed in the right-hand pane, with its component atoms scattered in a maze of sorts.
- Click on a file in any of 220 formats and it will be displayed in the viewer pane.
- Once you have added all the keywords in the right pane which are applicable for your site, click on the next keyword in the left pane which is applicable for your site.
- Your search and results panes can be resized and customized to whatever layout you find appropriate.
- 1.2 A sheet or page of postage stamps.
Example sentencesExamples - In 1958, the Post Office ceased the practice as collectors were purchasing only the plate blocks, leaving broken panes of stamps in post offices.
- This cover bears a pane of nine stamps from the Wedgwood £3 book of stamps and is unaddressed.
- The pane of 24 stamps also contained 24 connecting tabs in 12 designs.
- Each booklet contained a pane of 10 37c stamps from the current definitive range.
Origin Late Middle English (originally denoting a piece of something, such as a fence or strip of cloth): from Old French pan, from Latin pannus ‘piece of cloth’. |