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Looking for synonyms for "soar"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(v)
Alternative spelling of hang-glide. [(intransitive) To fly a hang glider.]
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(n)
(aircraft) A glider that is optimised for soaring and is equipped with fixed wings and fuselage.
(intransitive) To rush, flood, or increase suddenly.
A humming noise from something moving very fast.
rise rapidly
(intransitive) To rise or increase suddenly and extremely; to shoot up; to surge or spike.
(intransitive) To move softly, smoothly, or effortlessly.
(intransitive) To propel oneself rapidly upward, downward and/or in any horizontal direction such that momentum causes the body to become airborne.
(ambitransitive) To take a long walk (on something) for pleasure or exercise.
(intransitive) To ascend; rise; to go up.
The action or an instance of a surge.
The act of something that rises.
(intransitive) To move, or appear to move, physically upwards relative to the ground.
To fasten with spikes, or long, large nails.
The act of escalating.
A mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves.
(ambitransitive) To increase (something) in extent or intensity; to intensify or step up.
(intransitive) To fly apart with sudden violent force; to blow up, to burst, to detonate, to go off.
(physical) A solid object in the shape of a circle.
(adj)
On the increase.
(obsolete) To rise.
(intransitive) (of a quantity, etc.) To become larger or greater, to greaten.
(ergative) To become larger, to increase in magnitude.
The discharge of a gun or other weapon.
(business, trading, of the market, stocks etc., intransitive) To recover strength after a decline in prices.
(transitive) To take illegally, or without the owner's permission, something owned by someone else without intending to return it.
(intransitive) To have or receive advantage or profit; to acquire gain; to grow rich; to advance in interest, health, or happiness; to make progress.
(transitive) To make higher; to raise or increase in amount or quantity.
(transitive) To cause to produce a sound.
(poetic, transitive) To make rose-colored; to redden or flush.
(intransitive) To travel through the air, another gas, or a vacuum, without being in contact with a grounded surface.
A surname.
(fashion) A bodice worn instead of stays by women in the 18th century.
(intransitive) To jump.
A long walk, usually for pleasure or exercise.
the ordinal number of one hundred sixty in counting order
(literary, archaic) To soar upward.
An airplane; an aeroplane.
(transitive) To soar beyond or above.
An attic or similar space (often used for storage) in the roof of a house or other building.
(intransitive, poetic) To fly upward.
A long vehicle or craft propelled by a rocket engine; a missile or rocket-propelled spacecraft.
Any very tall building or structure; skyscraper.
(idiomatic) To begin flying; to become airborne or aloft; to take off and fly
(chiefly US, figuratively) to start flying.
Alternative form of take to the skies. [(chiefly US, figuratively) to start flying.]
(intransitive) To have a strong desire or ambition to achieve something.
(colloquial, simile) To move effortlessly and in an agile fashion.
To have achieved great success or prosperity.
(intransitive, poetic) To float upward.
A diurnal predatory bird of the family Accipitridae, smaller than an eagle.
(transitive) To fly better, faster, or further than.
(intransitive) To fly up.
To attack.
An inflatable buoyant object, often (but not necessarily) round and flexible.
(intransitive, colloquial) To grow or increase sharply.
(zootomy) An appendage of an animal's (bird, bat, insect) body that enables it to fly.
A buoyant device used to support something in water or another liquid.
To go outside for some fresh air; get some air.
(intransitive) To be suspended in the air, as if in defiance of gravity.
Of a winged animal, to take flight; to begin flying.
(idiomatic) To have one's fly (zipper) undone.
An instance, or the act of suddenly plunging downward.
A branching, hair-like structure that grows on the bodies of birds, used for flight, swimming, protection and display.
Synonym of spread one's wings.
(board sports, idiomatic) To make a jump.
To jump around from place to place as a small bird.
In a position with the wing raised.
(idiomatic, intransitive) To strike or release a projectile with great force.
(colloquial) To get lost; to scram.
(uncountable) The state, quality, or condition of being twisted, physically or mentally:
(countable) The amount by which something goes too far.
Something (such as an odor or perfume) that is carried through the air.
A spherically contained volume of air or other gas, especially one made from soapy liquid.
(idiomatic) To experiment in life; to find out what one is capable of; to try new things or activities.
(figurative) To depart hastily or unannounced; to escape or flee.
(idiomatic, intransitive) to begin ascent under rocket power
A section of a road or path that crosses over an obstacle, especially another road, railway, etc.
(intransitive) To travel by airplane to a destination.
(idiomatic) To pass or go past quickly, often without much interaction
(intransitive, formal, obsolete) To fly.
The act of flying.
A steep, controlled dive, especially by an aircraft with the engine off.
(uncountable) The sound of a succession of chirps as uttered by birds.
(archaic, poetic, intransitive) To rise or point upward like spears.
To fly over something.