v. i. | 1. | To fly aloft, as a bird; to mount upward on wings, or as on wings. | |||
2. | Fig.: To rise in thought, spirits, or imagination; to be exalted in mood. | ||||
3. | (Aëronautics) To fly by wind power; to glide indefinitely without loss of altitude. | ||||
n. | 1. | The act of soaring; upward flight. | |||
a. | 1. | See 3d Sore. | |||
1. | See Sore, reddish brown.
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Noun | 1. | soar - the act of rising upward into the air Synonyms: zoom |
Verb | 1. | soar - rise rapidly; "the dollar soared against the yes" |
2. | soar - fly by means of a hang glider Synonyms: hang glide | |
3. | soar - fly upwards or high in the sky | |
4. | soar - go or move upward; "The stock market soared after the cease-fire was announced" | |
5. | soar - fly a plane without an engine Synonyms: sailplane |
SOAR - 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]. |