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View synonyms for pylon

pylon

[ pahy-lon ]

noun

  1. a marking post or tower for guiding aviators, frequently used in races.
  2. a relatively tall structure at the side of a gate, bridge, or avenue, marking an entrance or approach.
  3. a monumental tower forming the entrance to an ancient Egyptian temple, consisting either of a pair of tall quadrilateral masonry masses with sloping sides and a doorway between them or of one such mass pierced with a doorway.
  4. a steel tower or mast carrying high-tension lines, telephone wires, or other cables and lines.
  5. Aeronautics. a finlike device used to attach engines, auxiliary fuel tanks, bombs, etc., to an aircraft wing or fuselage.


pylon

/ ˈpaɪlən /

noun

  1. a large vertical steel tower-like structure supporting high-tension electrical cables
  2. a post or tower for guiding pilots or marking a turning point in a race
  3. a streamlined aircraft structure for attaching an engine pod, external fuel tank, etc, to the main body of the aircraft
  4. a monumental gateway, such as one at the entrance to an ancient Egyptian temple
  5. a temporary artificial leg
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of pylon1

First recorded in 1840–50, pylon is from the Greek word pylṓn gateway, gate tower
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Word History and Origins

Origin of pylon1

C19: from Greek pulōn a gateway
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Example Sentences

He caught another five-yarder that he carted inside the right pylon after a presnap bit of candy during which he motioned right, then motioned left behind the offensive line, then motioned back right to catch the quick pass.

Boone went wide to the left, reached toward the goal line and touched the football to the pylon before falling out of bounds and losing possession of the ball.

The gigantic pylon, its shoulders breaking the sky four-square far overhead, seemed the prodigious portal of another world.

The largest still existing is the outer pylon of the great temple of Karnak.

This moulding bounds all the flat surfaces of the pylon, which are, moreover, covered with bas-reliefs and paintings.

From the base of the pylon spring those vertical masts from whose summits many coloured streamers flutter in the sun.

Obelisks and colossal statues seem to have been peculiarly necessary outside the first, or outer, pylon of a temple.

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