it has been a pit for fighting cocks since the 16th century &
by extension
the midshipmens compartment below decks on a ship since the 17th
&
later
the pilots compartment of an airplane
&
most recently of all
the drivers compartment in a racecar
Yes, the word "bolshy" does originate from the "bolsheviks".
this word comes from destruction
Where the cockpit is near the front, the opposite end of an aircraft is the tail. (Where the cockpit is on the top, the opposite is the undercarriage. In a passenger aircraft, the opposite of the cockpit or control area is the passenger area, or cabin.)
Bulgaria
From the Greek word "Brotherly Love".
The pilot always has to sit at a cockpit.
A cockpit is what it says: a pit in which game-cocks are placed in order to provoke them to fight.
The first syllable is stressed.
Yes, the word "bolshy" does originate from the "bolsheviks".
The word 'suds' is believed to originate from the Middle Dutch word: sudse, meaning bog.
exactly as you did. cockpit
The word "hamburger" did not originate in France. It is derived from the German city of Hamburg.
greek
In France
the word is from greek
The first syllable: COCKpit
Asia