The plane's seats...
Yes, that is how you spell occupied.
That is the correct spelling of the word "occupied".
All collective nouns are common nouns.There is no collective nouns specifically for jet planes, however the collective nouns for planes can be used; they are:a fleet of planes (a fleet of jet planes)a squadron of planes (a squadron of jet planes)a stack of planes (a stack of jet planes)
Synonyms for the word "occupied" are taken, used, busy.
The collective noun for the noun planes is a fleet of planes. The same collective noun can be used for a fleet of chartered planes.However, it would be uncommon to charter an entire fleet of planes; chartered planes are those that someone has chartered. It would be more common to have a fleet of planes available to be chartered. In other words, a fleet of charter planes.
none of the above.
20% of the seats are empty.
Yes, there is a difference in availability between seats marked as "delta unavailable" and "occupied" on the flight. "Delta unavailable" seats are not available for selection due to airline restrictions, while "occupied" seats are already taken by passengers.
planes
Yes, some planes have over 200 seats.
If all seats are occupied and everyone has a seat there are 36 seats
The time I sat in that row, the seats did not recline. They were uncomfortable. I try not to sit in them.
Some airlines that offer lay flat seats on their planes include Delta Air Lines, American Airlines, United Airlines, and British Airways.
Depends on what kind of plane you take. I have been on planes that have as few as 6 seats, and as many as 300.
No Fedex does not have passenger planes. Although their cargo planes do have a few passenger seats, these are used only for transporting Fedex employees and/or flight crews.
JetBlue, Frontier and Virgin America have satellite TV at all seats. Delta offers this service on some of its planes.
yes....under certain conditions, but these seats are only jump seats and usually reserved for company personnel on company business.