plāns

Etymology 1
Borrowed from, which is itself a borrowing from , from , which is ultimately from the same stem as the adjective below. This borrowing is first mentioned in 19th-century dictionaries.

Noun

 * 1) plan, map, blueprint, layout a detailed drawing or scheme of an object, a building, a territory
 * 2) plan, map a drawing indicating the path of a movement, its direction, order, etc.
 * 3) plan a future event worked out in detail; the corresponding text or document
 * 4) plan intention, idea, thoughts about the future realization of some course of action
 * 5)  plan concise sequential formulation of the structure of a text
 * 6) plane view from a certain standpoint, as a certain sphere of expression
 * 7) plane location of an object or a part of it, depending on the viewer's vantage point
 * 8) plane the frame at which a scene is filmed
 * 9)  plane level of importance
 * 1) plan a future event worked out in detail; the corresponding text or document
 * 2) plan intention, idea, thoughts about the future realization of some course of action
 * 3)  plan concise sequential formulation of the structure of a text
 * 4) plane view from a certain standpoint, as a certain sphere of expression
 * 5) plane location of an object or a part of it, depending on the viewer's vantage point
 * 6) plane the frame at which a scene is filmed
 * 7)  plane level of importance
 * 1) plan intention, idea, thoughts about the future realization of some course of action
 * 2)  plan concise sequential formulation of the structure of a text
 * 3) plane view from a certain standpoint, as a certain sphere of expression
 * 4) plane location of an object or a part of it, depending on the viewer's vantage point
 * 5) plane the frame at which a scene is filmed
 * 6)  plane level of importance
 * 1) plane view from a certain standpoint, as a certain sphere of expression
 * 2) plane location of an object or a part of it, depending on the viewer's vantage point
 * 3) plane the frame at which a scene is filmed
 * 4)  plane level of importance
 * 1) plane the frame at which a scene is filmed
 * 2)  plane level of importance
 * 1)  plane level of importance
 * 1)  plane level of importance

Etymology 2
From, from , ,  with an extra (adjectivizing) suffix -no-s. The semantic change probably was “to stretch out” > “to make thin by stretching” > “thin.” Cognates include 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1)  thin having a small cross section
 * 2)  thin with a small cross section; not thick, not dense, light, translucid
 * 3)  thin such that its component parts are far from each other; syn. rets
 * 4)  thin not very nutritious, lean, rather liquid in consistency
 * 5)  thin not dense, not opaque
 * 6)  thin, weak
 * 7)  thin, poor
 * 8)  incomplete, weak
 * šādā elektriskajā gaismā putna miegs ir plāns — under this electric light the bird's sleep is weak
 * tikai smaids palika plānāks — only the smile became thinner, weaker
 * 1)  thin not very nutritious, lean, rather liquid in consistency
 * 2)  thin not dense, not opaque
 * 3)  thin, weak
 * 4)  thin, poor
 * 5)  incomplete, weak
 * šādā elektriskajā gaismā putna miegs ir plāns — under this electric light the bird's sleep is weak
 * tikai smaids palika plānāks — only the smile became thinner, weaker
 * 1)  thin not dense, not opaque
 * 2)  thin, weak
 * 3)  thin, poor
 * 4)  incomplete, weak
 * šādā elektriskajā gaismā putna miegs ir plāns — under this electric light the bird's sleep is weak
 * tikai smaids palika plānāks — only the smile became thinner, weaker
 * 1)  thin, weak
 * 2)  thin, poor
 * 3)  incomplete, weak
 * šādā elektriskajā gaismā putna miegs ir plāns — under this electric light the bird's sleep is weak
 * tikai smaids palika plānāks — only the smile became thinner, weaker
 * 1)  incomplete, weak
 * šādā elektriskajā gaismā putna miegs ir plāns — under this electric light the bird's sleep is weak
 * tikai smaids palika plānāks — only the smile became thinner, weaker
 * tikai smaids palika plānāks — only the smile became thinner, weaker

Etymology 3
A nominalized form of the adjective, with the etymological meaning of “flat” > “ground, floor.” The different intonation is the result of historical changes in the position of stress. Cognates include 🇨🇬 dialectal, standard form , 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬 (🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  barn floor, threshing floor syn.