The verb for flight is fly.
Other verbs are flies, flying and flew.
Some example sentences are:
"I will fly the plane".
"He flies like a maniac".
"They are flying too low".
"He flew the plane yesterday, it's my turn!"
The word 'fly' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of insect, or a zipper opening in a pair of pants or a tent. The plural form for the noun fly is flies.
The noun forms for the verb to fly are flyer and the gerund, flying.
example: Waiter, there's a fly in my soup!
well... if you are speaking of flying in the past tense it would be has flown
As a verb it does not have a plural form.
The plural form of the noun fly is flies.
you fly
we fly
they fly
The word flew is a verb. It is the simple past tense of the irregular verb fly.
its mean to already fly
glide soar over
Falling
Flying.
hurry, dash, run, race, sprint, bolt, dart, gallop, career, charge, shoot, hurtle, careen, hare, fly, speed, zoom, scurry, scuttle, scamper, hasten
1. This is not an idiom - an idiom is when you cannot figure out the meaning of the phrase by just defining the words. You can figure out what this phrase means by the words and context. 2. It's not pugs, which are a type of dog. It's WHEN PIGS FLY. 3. You use this phrase whenever you think whatever something is not at all likely to occur
Yes, a compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that form a word with a meaning of its own: butter+ fly = butterfly.
Parafishing is another term used for fly fishing. This is a type of fishing sport where the fisherman uses a rod with an artificial fly for bait.
That means "you fly". However, this is the subjunctive case, meaning it is only used in some special constructions, for example conditionals.
what is the meaning of shoo fly dont bother me
The words weight, fly and sand have "fly" in common, because together they can form other words. Their direct relationship is: fly, fly weight, and sand fly.
flout fly
Yes. Same as you, in an aeroplane or other aircraft.
The LITERAL meaning is that you are on a handle and you fly off it.
only if you put them in a flying device. in other words... NO
yes, in the same way the other flies he can fly too.
The same as any other animal- from the food they eat.
The LITERAL meaning is that you are on a handle and you fly off it.
hurry, dash, run, race, sprint, bolt, dart, gallop, career, charge, shoot, hurtle, careen, hare, fly, speed, zoom, scurry, scuttle, scamper, hasten
no it is not same
the venus fly trap in other words called dioena muscipula the plant is a carnivore but cant hurt a human!