aéroplane
French
Etymology
Coined by French aviation pioneer and sculptor Joseph Pline in 1855, from Ancient Greek ἀερόπλανος (aeróplanos, “wandering in air”), from ἀήρ (aḗr, “air”) + πλάνος (plános, “wandering”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a.e.ʁɔ.plan/
Audio: (file)
Noun
aéroplane m (plural aéroplanes)
Descendants
Descendants
- → English: aeroplane, aëroplane (dated), airplane (US, Canada, Philippines), æroplane (hypercorrect, dated)
- → Esperanto: aeroplano
- → Galician: aeroplano
- → German: Aeroplan
- → Greek: αεροπλάνο (aeropláno)
- → Ido: aeroplano
- → Interlingua: aeroplano
- → Italian: aeroplano
- → New Latin: āeroplanum
- → Persian: آئروپلان (â'eroplân)
- → Portuguese: aeroplano
- → Romanian: aeroplan
- → Spanish: aeroplano
Further reading
- “aéroplane”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.