1. sighting - Noun
2. sighting - Verb
of Sight
a. & n. from Sight, v. t.
Source: Webster's dictionaryI was 8 or 9 when I had a sighting of a disk-shaped craft that convinced me that it was certainly not an airplane or anything conventional. Steven M. Greer
Decision, the moment of saying yes, is prompted by something deeper; recognition. I recognise you; I know you again, from a dream or another life, or perhaps even from a chance sighting in a café, years ago. Jeanette Winterson
There has been a [name of player] sighting. Keith Olbermann
It's a very typical UFO sighting. Carter said it changed color and, in the physical report, described it as being about the size of the moon. And he saw it with about twenty-five other people. Dwight Schultz
Dame Edna is that rarest sighting in our time of the absolute comic, an inspired personification of caprice whose comedy answered the primal call to take the audience for a tumble. John Lahr
There is no unhappiness like the misery of sighting land Again after a cheerful, careless voyage. Mark Twain