I really have no idea what the original poster is asking, as the question is entirely too vague to be given a real answer, but here's my summary of landing an airplane.
1) All airliners use instrument landing system (ILS) approaches, which provide the pilot a ground track and a glideslope. The aircraft is expected to follow this glideslope all the way across the threshold of the runway.
2) Once over the threshold, at an altitude of some ten feet, the aircraft brings the nose first level, then nose-high, in what is called the "flare." The aircraft is flying very slowly at this point, so, despite the nose-up attitude, it is in fact still very gradually losing altitude.
3) Shortly after entering flare attitude, the main wheels should touchdown. The aircraft continues to lose speed (via aerodynamic drag, thrust reversers, speed brakes, whatever) until its nosewheel naturally drops and settles onto the runway, too.
The touchdown may be affected by so-called "ground effect," a sort of artificial boost in lift caused by the presence of the ground below the wings of the plane. (Wings work by pushing some air downward; when the ground is near, it builds a high-pressure area.) This ground effect can cause an aircraft to "float" above the runway for, in some cases, up to 10-15 seconds, in flare attitude and with proper landing speed. This is almost always caused by flaring too high, but can be made worse by wind conditions. The end result of such a float is usually a sudden, jarring drop of several feet after the aircraft slows enough that its wings no longer generate adequate lift.
- Warren