英語 の講師を検索する
Alex Jong
"airplane" "aeroplane" "plane" "aircraft". Are they different?
2017年4月24日 16:04
回答 · 11
4
aircraft = any machine capable of flight, including airplanes, helicopters, hot air balloons, blimps and dirigibles
- The aviation museum has examples of almost ever kind of aircraft ever used.
Airplane = aircraft with wings. Commonly used in everyday speech.
- Most airplanes have one set of two wings. Biplanes have two sets of wings, and triplanes haves three sets.
- A 747 is a really big airplane.
Aeroplane = airplane in British English
- My spell-checker is set for American English, and so "aeroplane" is always marked as misspelled.
Plane = short for airplane. Even more commonly used than "airplane."
- I like to go to the airport to watch the planes land and take off.
- (while leaving the airport) Oh, no! I think I left my sweater on the plane.
- I got a good price on my plane ticket.
2017年4月24日
3
I agree with Evelyn and Jerry's definitions. Plane, airplane and aeroplane refer to the same object. But whilst all planes are aircraft, not all aircraft are planes.
And just a small add-on from a British English perspective:
The short form "plane" is by no means just an American usage. Because our version of the American word "airplane" still has three rather than two syllables - "aeroplane" as opposed to the simplified "airplane" - we are even more likely to say "plane" in everyday usage.
2017年4月25日
They're synonyms but we haven't used the spelling 'aeroplane' in the US since the 1920s or so.
2017年4月24日
まだあなたの答えが見つかりませんか?
質問を書き留めて、ネイティブスピーカーに手伝ってもらいましょう!
Alex Jong
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, 韓国語, ロシア語
言語学習
英語
こんな記事もいかがでしょう

Speak More Fluently with This Simple Technique
17 いいね · 2 コメント

How to Read and Understand a Business Contract in English
17 いいね · 3 コメント

6 Ways italki Can Help You Succeed in Your School Language Classes
13 いいね · 8 コメント
他の記事