kite
Betekenis (Engels)
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- A bird of prey of the family Accipitridae.
- A bird of prey of the family Accipitridae.
- A bird of prey of the family Accipitridae.
- A bird of prey of the family Accipitridae.
- A rapacious person.
- A lightweight toy or other device, traditionally flat and shaped like a triangle with a segment of a circle attached to its base or like a quadrilateral (see sense 9), carried on the wind and tethered and controlled from the ground by one or more lines.
- A tethered object which deflects its position in a medium by obtaining lift and drag in reaction with its relative motion in the medium.
- A planetary configuration wherein one planet of a grand trine is in opposition to an additional fourth planet.
- (slang) A blank cheque; a fraudulent cheque, such as one issued even though there are insufficient funds to honour it, or one that has been altered without authorization.
- (slang) An accommodation bill (“a bill of exchange endorsed by a reputable third party acting as a guarantor, as a favour and without compensation”).
- (slang) A rider who is good at climbs but less good at descents.
- A polygon resembling the shape of a traditional toy kite (sense 3): a quadrilateral having two pairs of edges of equal length, the edges of each pair touching each other at one end.
- (slang) An aeroplane or aircraft.
- In a square-rigged ship: originally a sail positioned above a topsail; later a lightweight sail set above the topgallants, such as a studding sail or a jib topsail.
- (slang) A spinnaker (“supplementary sail to a mainsail”).
- The brill (Scophthalmus rhombus), a type of flatfish.
- (slang) A (usually concealed) letter or oral message, especially one passed illegally into, within, or out of a prison.
Concepten
vlieger
wouw
kiekendief
vliegeren
Frequentie
Uitgesproken als (IPA)
/kaɪt/
Etymologie (Engels)
The noun is from Middle English kyte, kīte, kete (“a kite endemic to Europe, especially the red kite (Milvus milvus)”), from Old English cȳta (“kite; bittern”), from Proto-West Germanic *kūtijō, diminutive of Proto-Germanic *kūts (“bird of prey”), from Proto-Indo-European *gewH-d- (“to cry, screech”). The English word is cognate with Scots kyt, kyte (“kite; bird of prey”), Middle High German kiuzelīn, kützlīn (“owling”) (modern German Kauz (“owl”)). Possibly a doublet of coot. Sense 3 (“lightweight toy”) is from the fact that it hovers in the air like the bird. The verb is derived from the noun.
Related words
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