Aeroplanes (another word for airplanes) are flying vehicles.
Airplanes are vehicles that you can pay to get on to fly from one place to another. Some planes are used to fight wars and others are passenger or cargo planes which carry things to sell.
Airplanes are aerodynamic equipment designed for transportation or fighting.
"Aero-plane" was the original word used for "airplane."
The word 'aeroplane' is a variation of the spelling of 'airplane', a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a powered flying vehicle with fixed wings and a weight greater than that of the air it displaces; a word for a thing.
An airplane is a vehicle able to lift off the ground with the use of jets and wings. It is maneuvered by ailerons, rudders, and elevators ( not the kind you use in the shopping mall). It can be powered by turboprops, propellers, and ramjets instead of jets.
An aeroplane is another name for an airplane - a heavier-than-air aircraft with fixed wings.
An airplane is a powered heavier-than-air aircraft with fixed wings.
a robber in an aero planes are called air bobs, airates
'planos' (Spanish) = Plans, design, or layout (aero)planes (English) = aviones, aeroplanos (carpenters') planes (English) = cepillos planes (i.e. surfaces) English) = planos
aero planes space rockets frames cans
Titanium is a metal. we use it for make aero planes structures.
Titanium is a metal. we use it for make aero planes structures and surgical instruments.
Titanium is a metal. we use it for make aero planes structures and surgical instruments.
no they can not because it won't be aero dynamic and the plane will crash
Titanium is a metal. we use it for make aero planes structures and surgical instruments. we can use TiO2 for make paints.
Titanium is a metal. we use it for make aero planes structures and surgical instruments.
Because the air-pressure under their Wings is greater than the air-pressure above their Wings. See the aero-foil.
AERO was created in 2004-09.
Russell J. Hannigan has written: 'Spaceflight in the era of aero-space planes' -- subject(s): Launch vehicles (Astronautics), Reusable space vehicles