Soar
verb (used without object)
1.
to fly upward, as a bird.
2.
to fly at a great height, without visible movements of the pinions, as a bird.
3.
to glide along at a height, as an airplane.
4.
to rise or ascend to a height, as a mountain.
5.
to rise or aspire to a higher or more exalted level:
His hopes soared.
noun
6.
an act or instance of soaring.
7.
the height attained in soaring.
verb (intransitive)
1.
to rise or fly upwards into the air
2.
(of a bird, aircraft, etc) to glide while maintaining altitude by the use of ascending air currents
3.
to rise or increase in volume, size, etc: soaring prices
noun
4.
the act of soaring
5.
the altitude attained by soaring
1. State, Operator And Result. A general problem-solving production system architecture, intended as a model of human intelligence. Developed by A. Newell in the early 1980s. SOAR was originally implemented in Lisp and OPS5 and is currently implemented in Common Lisp. Version: Soar6.
E-mail: .
[“The SOAR Papers”, P.S. Rosenbloom et al eds, MIT Press 1993].
(1994-11-04)
2. Smalltalk On A RISC. A RISC microprocessor designed by David Patterson’s at Berekeley.
(1994-11-04)
Read Also:
- Soaraway
adjective 1. exceedingly successful
- Soared
verb (used without object) 1. to fly upward, as a bird. 2. to fly at a great height, without visible movements of the pinions, as a bird. 3. to glide along at a height, as an airplane. 4. to rise or ascend to a height, as a mountain. 5. to rise or aspire to a […]
- Soarer
verb (used without object) 1. to fly upward, as a bird. 2. to fly at a great height, without visible movements of the pinions, as a bird. 3. to glide along at a height, as an airplane. 4. to rise or ascend to a height, as a mountain. 5. to rise or aspire to a […]
- Soaring
noun 1. the sport of flying a sailplane. verb (used without object) 1. to fly upward, as a bird. 2. to fly at a great height, without visible movements of the pinions, as a bird. 3. to glide along at a height, as an airplane. 4. to rise or ascend to a height, as a […]
- So as to
In order to, as in We took off our shoes so as to avoid scratching the newly finished floors . This idiom is always followed by an infinitive. For a synonym, see in order to , def. 5.