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pane
1[ peyn ]
noun
- one of the divisions of a window or the like, consisting of a single plate of glass in a frame.
- a plate of glass for such a division.
- a panel, as of a wainscot, ceiling, door, etc.
- a flat section, side, or surface, as one of the sides of a bolthead.
- Philately. a sheet of stamps or any large portion of one, as a half or a quarter, as issued by the post office.
±è²¹²Ôé
2[ pa-ney; French pa-ney ]
adjective
- (of food) covered with breadcrumbs; breaded.
±è²¹²Ôé
1/ pane /
adjective
- (of fish, meat, etc) dipped or rolled in breadcrumbs before cooking
pane
2/ ±è±ðɪ²Ô /
noun
- a sheet of glass in a window or door
- a panel of a window, door, wall, etc
- a flat section or face, as of a cut diamond
- philately
- any of the rectangular marked divisions of a sheet of stamps made for convenience in selling
- a single page in a stamp booklet See also ³Ùê³Ù±ð-²ú곦³ó±ð se tenant
pane
3/ ±è±ðɪ²Ô /
noun
- a variant of peen
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ±è²¹²Ô±ðl±ð²õ²õ adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of pane1
Origin of pane2
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of pane1
Example Sentences
Residents of two tower blocks in north London have described their shock after discovering replacement window panes had been installed inside out.
He pointed out his childhood bedroom window and said he wants to take a pane of glass and part of the old molding to make a commemorative frame before it’s bulldozed when they sell.
The heat broke the outer pane of a tempered glass window, but the inner pane held, Chasen said.
Later in the sketch, Johnson’s Trump stood behind a pane of bulletproof glass as he told the crowd, “I see you trying to leave, but the doors are locked.â€
Shoppers are transported from the minimalist coffee shop into an expansive futuristic industrial space featuring silver beams and glowing aluminum ceiling pane fixtures contrasted with a natural concrete floor.
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