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Glide   /glaɪd/   Listen
Glide

noun
1.
A vowellike sound that serves as a consonant.  Synonym: semivowel.
2.
The act of moving smoothly along a surface while remaining in contact with it.  Synonyms: coast, slide.  "The children lined up for a coast down the snowy slope"
3.
The activity of flying a glider.  Synonyms: gliding, sailing, sailplaning, soaring.
verb
(past & past part. glided; pres. part. gliding)
1.
Move smoothly and effortlessly.
2.
Fly in or as if in a glider plane.
3.
Cause to move or pass silently, smoothly, or imperceptibly.



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"Glide" Quotes from Famous Books



... was a time, for about a week, when we were engaged to be married. But just as I was beginning to take a serious view of life and study furniture catalogues and feel pretty solemn when the restaurant orchestra played "The Wedding Glide," I'm hanged if she didn't break it off, and a month later she was married to a fellow of the name of Yeardsley—Clarence Yeardsley, ...
— My Man Jeeves • P. G. Wodehouse

... his cunning, he could not hope to elude the scent and sight of shepherd dogs. It would be best to go back the way he had come, wait for darkness, then cross the canyon and climb out, and work around to his objective point. Turning at once, he started to glide back. But almost immediately he was brought stock-still and thrilling by the sound ...
— To the Last Man • Zane Grey

... it seems to last, that noonday stillness, a noonday breezy and oceanic, the sea sharp-edged, hard-looking, dark-blue, tossing spray along its ridges, not rough, but restless, shewing against the ships white foams a moment, which silently glide away. ...
— The Lord of the Sea • M. P. Shiel

... the laughing-bird, called Cockatoo, Who drops them a courtesy, and cries "How d' ye do?" Or Mungo, the negro, who quaintly and sly Takes his tea, Cayenne pepper, and cold apple-pie. Some gaze on the Cygnets that glide like a dream, And bend down to admire their fair forms in the stream; Some laugh at their fancies, or muse on a flower, And all are delighted, so happy the hour. Wouldst thou gaze with emotions far purer than mirth On one of the ...
— The Peacock 'At Home' AND The Butterfly's Ball AND The Fancy Fair • Catherine Ann Dorset

... after it." Goldsmith's fancy was taken by it; and everybody admires in the "Traveller" the extraordinary conceit of a heart dragging a lengthening chain. The smoothness of too many rhymed pentameters is that of thin ice over shallow water; so long as we glide along rapidly, all is well; but if we dwell a moment on any one spot, we may find ourselves knee-deep in mud. A later poet, in trying to improve on Goldsmith, shows ...
— Among My Books - First Series • James Russell Lowell


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