: an elongated and usually open and mobile column or band (as of smoke, exhaust gases, or blowing snow)
c
: an animal structure having a main shaft bearing many hairs or filamentous parts
especially: a full bushy tail
d
: any of several columns of molten rock rising from the earth's lower mantle that are theorized to drive tectonic plate movement and to underlie hot spots
Noun
a hat with bright ostrich plumes
the Nobel Prize for Literature is the plume that all authors covet Verb
that jerk plumes himself on his supposed athletic skills
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Noun
Video footage showed a plume of thick black smoke rising from a gas station in the neighbouring Thai Sisaket province, as firefighters rushed to extinguish the blaze.—USA Today, 24 July 2025 Then, 12 months later, a new plume was lime green to signify the start of Brat summer.—David MacK, Rolling Stone, 22 July 2025
Verb
Black smoke rose out of the Sistine Chapel early Thursday, signaling a failure to elect a new pope, before white smoke plumed out just hours later.—Brandi D. Addison, Austin American Statesman, 8 May 2025 Smoke will plume into the Roman sky again on Wednesday night.—James Horncastle, New York Times, 14 May 2025 See All Example Sentences for plume
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, from Anglo-French, from Latin pluma small soft feather — more at fleece
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