yes. It is referred to as a stall and at that point it falls out of the sky, but it will only really halt when it hits a solid object. If you have a float plane why not land it on the water if the engine fails? As long as you have sufficient airspeed the plane will continue to fly. A pilot being a student pilot is taught that you fly an airplane as long as you can, when it no longer flys then you are a passenger
To transport people from one country to antoher, for example, travelling from Ireland to Spain. The most common reason to use an aeroplane to travel is: foreign holidays.
momentum
well for enjoyment or some randomer wanted to see what could fly...
no, Leonardo da Vinci's flying machines did not work.Not exactly. It could balance a man's weight in air, but only for a very short period of time. After at most a minute the weight would add up and the man, with the machine, would fall. To really give it a boost, fire could be used to lift the machine, but it would make it somewhat uncontrollable with the boost, and it would even catch fire. But, the machine did create the theory for flight. It was a sloppy start, but it eventually influenced many inventors to try and make the first flying machine. The structure of da Vinci's machine also influenced hang-gliders.
The main reason for performing a dyno test on an engine is to make sure the engine is running smoothly after changes have been made. When you adjust things like fuel and air, you still need to make sure the engine is running properly.
Friction will make it harder for a flying animal. Consequently they evolve to be as streamlined as possible- with the exception of the Bumble Bee for some reason.
The same reason any other flying bird needs wings- in order to fly.
This person is frightened of flying/or cannot drive/or doesn't have a car.
The primary reason why the aeroplane was invented is that man had seen the birds fly and he wondered if he could build a machine that might take him up into the air.
There's a reason. Spend $70 on a code reader and find it.
Benjamin Franklin, a man of reason and science, is a good example of an American diplomat, statesman and scientist.
Reason, if used in the right context, is already a verb. For example "to reason with someone" is an action and therefore a verb.