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134 Sentences With "aeroplanes"

How to use aeroplanes in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "aeroplanes" and check conjugation/comparative form for "aeroplanes". Mastering all the usages of "aeroplanes" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I have a fleet of submarines, aeroplanes, trucks and boats.
Not so long ago, entertainment on aeroplanes was a communal endeavour.
Another imposed stiffer punishments on people who shine lasers at aeroplanes.
The aeroplanes started the spraying from that edge of the river.
"I also received orders for superbikes, yachts, aeroplanes and bicycles," Lin said.
A large number were murdered, often by being thrown out of aeroplanes.
Hardly anyone would read a story headlined "22004,21960 AEROPLANES DIDN'T CRASH YESTERDAY".
That people get on aeroplanes at all is a matter of trust.
RESTRICTIONS on smartphones aboard aeroplanes have long been a bugbear of business travellers.
Global plasma exports were worth $126bn in 2016—more than exports of aeroplanes.
HM around six years after launch to build a fleet of 50 aeroplanes.
Jammed up against fences are aeroplanes of various vintages and states of disassembly.
This is crucial to the aerodynamics of products such as cars and aeroplanes.
"This is in fact the weakness of all China-made aeroplanes," he said.
Another example is Air India, a financial black hole that flies habitually-delayed aeroplanes.
Four years ago Russian aeroplanes carried out a dummy nuclear attack on Swedish targets.
"I love one-take videos and I love aeroplanes... and airports," explains Joseph Mount.
American exports to China are relatively concentrated in areas such as aeroplanes and farm products.
As well as flying aeroplanes, computers watch bank accounts for fraud and adjudicate insurance claims.
The use of carbon composites in aeroplanes is another innovation that could also transform flight.
Fixed-wing aeroplanes circled the area's expressways, which have recently seen a spike in shootings.
After participants landed at Hangzhou's airport, red-carpeted stairways were rolled up to their aeroplanes.
Globalisation went into rapid reverse in the 1920s and 1930s despite the spread of aeroplanes and telephones.
Today blood is big business—with global exports worth more, in 2016, than global exports of aeroplanes.
Before August 2016, all non-hobbyist drone operators had to hold licences to fly manned aeroplanes, too.
Airbus, for example, has delivered just three of 100 aeroplanes ordered by Iran in 2016 for $19bn.
It now relies on aeroplanes and the Libyan coastguard to do the job of disrupting smuggling networks.
Drones fitted with low-power ADS-B would be better able to avoid aeroplanes and each other.
Turkish can use smaller narrow-body aeroplanes, which are cheaper to operate, on its routes to Europe.
It made sense to secure aeroplanes, since they themselves have been used as weapons of mass destruction.
As real-life aeroplanes grew bigger and more advanced, Tatlin remained hung up on his flying "worker's bicycle".
And, as with Ebola, a worry is that aeroplanes can carry the virus to other more distant cities.
PM Lee: (chuckle) Well, we're hoping to sign an agreement between SIA and Boeing to buy more aeroplanes.
Over the next two decades, Boeing estimates, China will buy 6,000 new aeroplanes, becoming its first trillion-dollar market.
Live information about nearby aircraft is provided by a software company called Snowflake, which tracks aeroplanes around the planet.
Oil to fuel heavy-goods vehicles, aeroplanes and ships, and to make plastics, will be needed for many years yet.
LONDON (Reuters) - Aeroplanes could be powered by jet fuel made from household rubbish from 2024 under plans by Shell (RDSa.
The American company bested its European arch-rival in supplying jets to airlines however, delivering 748 aeroplanes to Airbus's 688.
Jet's operational fleet stood at 28 aeroplanes as of Wednesday, a company spokesman told Reuters, versus 119 planes last year.
Mr Muilenburg says he is "confident" that the updated plane will be "one of the safest aeroplanes ever to fly".
Panos Kammenos, a member of Greece's ruling coalition, wonders if Greeks are being sprayed with mind-altering chemicals from aeroplanes.
"We had Indian coastguard boats surrounding us, there were helicopters, aeroplanes, the whole boat was filled with smoke," she said.
Intensive farms soak up scarce water and fly their produce around the world in aeroplanes that spew out carbon dioxide.
The carrier's survival is crucial for the host of companies from which it leases more than 100 of its aeroplanes.
GROUNDED Jet's operational fleet stood at 28 aeroplanes as of Wednesday, a company spokesman told Reuters, versus 119 planes last year.
I had a really nice job as an engineer and I was earning a lot of money, testing parts of aeroplanes.
It gave the lines "Let aeroplanes circle moaning overhead/Scribbling on the sky the message 'He Is Dead'" a shuddering poignancy.
Like, why is he out there, searching for gigs, rather than painting model aeroplanes or running a stationary business on eBay?
We weren't designed to sit around and type on computers, nor were we designed to hurtle through the air in newfangled aeroplanes.
Siemens said it now had all software that its customers needed to develop complex electronic machinery such as aeroplanes, trains and cars.
His campaign combines pocketbook promises with put-downs of Mr Trudeau (he's a "high-carbon hypocrite" because he campaigns using two aeroplanes).
The airport's proposed 3,700-metre (2.3 miles) runway will be able to accommodate large Airbus A380 aeroplanes, said Australian Infrastructure Minister Paul Fletcher.
During the harshest hours, some of their aeroplanes could be grounded at their full weight around half the time, according to the paper.
Germany's largest airline, which owns budget carrier Eurowings, also had problems integrating 77 aeroplanes it took over from bankrupt domestic rival Air Berlin.
The ShFE already offers aluminium futures and China is the world's top producer and consumer of the metal used in cars and aeroplanes.
Going with the mood, this summer Blue Air, Romania's largest carrier, unveiled a new series of aeroplanes featuring Romania's past kings on their tails.
Aeroplanes and UAVs often fly over hurricanes, getting pinpricks of data, but these result in inaccurate predictions regarding storm system movements, because they're incomplete.
Among other projects, the American army is hurriedly upgrading its shoulder-launched Stinger missiles, which are used to attack low-flying aeroplanes and helicopters.
In the past five or so years many ships' propellers have been fitted with tip fins analogous to the turbulence-reducing upturned winglets on aeroplanes.
UNLIKE a helicopter, aeroplanes are inclined to fly, Harry Reasoner, a veteran American newsman, wryly observed after watching choppers in action during the Vietnam war.
When Qatar Airways, the national airline, was barred from Saudi airspace in June, Omani aeroplanes (rented by Qatar) ferried stranded passengers from Jeddah to Doha.
The German company's move comes in response to growing customer demand for more complex software for smart connected products such as aeroplanes, trains and cars.
Autopilot features have long been used in aeroplanes, but the situation is very different there, where a pilot typically has plenty of time to react.
TWO years ago, this blog lamented the demise of in-flight entertainment on aeroplanes: Upgrade your inbox and get our Daily Dispatch and Editor's Picks.
Boeing, which is one of the most well-known manufacturers in the world, focuses on selling everything from aeroplanes to rockets, satellites and telecommunications equipment.
Therefore, China does hope that there can be deeper discussion with regards to import products like aeroplanes, cotton, electronic beds and other high-tech products.
Tiantan armchairs are found in the Great Hall of the People and the central leadership compound of Zhongnanhai in Beijing, and even aboard leaders' aeroplanes.
"Lufthansa utilization is a third of ours – because they have to park their aeroplanes at night because people are getting disturbed by the noise," he said.
Silicon Valley ultimately focused on producing small things, including microprocessors, and Seattle on bigger ones, such as aeroplanes (Boeing was for decades the city's economic anchor).
But now, a federal judge may finally do what the others failed to, or would not: stop seat rows on aeroplanes inching closer and closer together.
Schaeffler's industrial division, which makes ball bearings for products ranging from tools to aeroplanes, is also starting to benefit from greater cost savings, the company said.
These range from departure lounges with no toilets in South Sudan to aeroplanes having near misses with people crossing a runway in the Central African Republic.
Two years ago the dynasty's 150th anniversary was celebrated with substantial pomp: soldiers presenting arms, a regimental band, and aeroplanes leaving smoke trails in the national colours.
Its fleet of 268 Airbus A380 and Boeing 777 jets as of March 31 is roughly three times as big as Etihad's, measured by number of aeroplanes.
This long-haul renaissance can be attributed in part to lighter, more fuel-efficient aircraft made of carbon-fibre composites (older aeroplanes are constructed mainly of aluminium).
Boeing predicts that over the next 20 years China-based airlines will spend $1.1tn on more than 7,200 new aeroplanes, accounting for one-fifth of global demand.
Analysts said commodity chemicals maker SABIC's push to diversify fits Clariant's business, which includes higher-margin catalysts, de-icers for aeroplanes, wildfire retardants and ingredients for shampoo.
The researchers found that the drones' rigid and dense materials—such as metal, plastic and lithium batteries—can put aeroplanes at much greater risk than a bird carcass.
LauncherOne was released from a height of 35,000 feet, which is a typical cruising altitude for commercial aeroplanes, which is where it would be during an actual launch.
The most famous of those, the former national security adviser Sambo Dasuki, is charged with dishing out $2 billion worth of fake contracts for helicopters, aeroplanes and ammunition.
Backers had hoped it would spur development of Europe's aerospace industry, but the commission feared it would create a dominant position in markets for medium-sized commuter aeroplanes.
The cargo jet, which resembles a winged whale, carries aerofoils, tails and bits of fuselage from production sites across Europe to be turned into aeroplanes in Toulouse and Hamburg.
The autism of a particularly high-functioning person might be almost imperceptible, manifesting itself only subtly in an obsessive interest with maps, say, or the merits of different aeroplanes.
Others said they felt ashamed when people they know ditched the Note 7 for a rival product or when they heard news announcements about the phones being banned from aeroplanes.
"We're going to have the finest equipment of all types—whether it's aeroplanes, or ships or equipment in general—that we've ever had in the history of our country," he said.
It is 145cm long by 76cm wide (57x30 inches), is built from composite materials and contains 5003 high-powered electric ducted fans of the type used to fly model jet aeroplanes.
When it cuts staff, and still prevents weapons from making it onto aeroplanes, it can claim that it has managed to do as good a job as ever while saving money.
However, Tata would also inherit a company struggling to make any money, and whose survival is crucial for the host of lessors from which it leases over 100 of its aeroplanes.
HK) said on Monday it will raise up to 12.7 billion yuan ($1.9 billion) in a private sale of new shares to fund the purchase of aeroplanes and replenish working capital.
Also at the briefing, Chief Financial Officer Xiao Lixin said China Southern will take delivery of 115 aeroplanes in 2018, taking its fleet to 840 aircraft by the end of the year.
With more than 3.1m shipped last year in America alone, the need to devise smarter technology and better rules to keep drones away from aeroplanes, and from each other, is growing urgent.
But the other two items are, joining the more than 100,000 products that feature Kumamon's image, from stickers and notebooks to cars and aeroplanes (a budget Japanese airline flies a Kumamon 737).
The company has been removing CO2 from the atmosphere since 2015 at a pilot plant in British Columbia and converting it into fuel which can power cars, trucks and aeroplanes since 2017.
In order to "engrave them on people's minds", folksy propaganda posters now preach these ideas from almost every bare patch of wall in China, on TV, at road junctions and in aeroplanes.
They prefer to base estimates of future risk—and hence premiums—on hard data of what happened in the past, eg, the number of aeroplanes that crashed and the total losses incurred.
The other stereotype is 1997 made flesh: fizzy lager and England shirts; 18-34 holidays and being arrested on aeroplanes; saying "garçon" to literally any nationality of waiter; thinking Liam Gallagher is good.
Thanks society for pushing for your rights to be served nuts on aeroplanes, and thank you to the airlines who insist that they will never reconsider this snack option due to high demand.
The formality took place in the presence of several French and American officers and caused embarrassment to the Americans who, on Sunday last, brought down two German aeroplanes in the nick of time.
Rolls-Royce, which makes engines for the aeroplanes, ships, trains and heavy-duty trucks, said that L'Orange would continue as a key supplier to its power systems business under a 15-year agreement.
TAKE JUST about any trade fight today, and President Donald Trump's America is at the centre of it: with Europe over cars and aeroplanes; with foreign producers of steel; with China over, well, everything.
Technological advances are expanding the list of products and services that require a lifelong commitment of trust between clients and suppliers, from chips that keep aeroplanes aloft, to devices that control electrical power grids.
Bauxite is the raw material for aluminum, which is used in everything from beer cans to aeroplanes and is expected to gain greater use in a decarbonizing economy as a lightweight alternative to steel.
BRUSSELS, March 3 (Reuters) - Hybrid electric aeroplanes carrying around 100 people will be flying commercially by 2029, the chief technology officer of British aero-engines maker Rolls-Royce said at a conference on Tuesday.
Asked about hybrid electric aeroplanes, Rolls-Royce CTO Paul Stein told a conference he believed regional hybrid planes, usually said to carry about 100 people, could be flying before the end of the decade.
"The world will continue to produce and use fossil-based fuels, aeroplanes, cars and industrial goods, and Goldman Sachs will continue to support clients in transactions that are important to economic activity," he wrote.
On 11th January, Ashwani Lohani, the boss of Air India, toldThe Hindu newspaper that the carrier plans to reserve six seats in the front rows of its aeroplanes for women passengers who are travelling alone.
That would harm big export industries like drugs and chemicals, as well as carmakers, which send four of their every ten cars to the EU. Aeroplanes might be grounded, for lack of a safety regime.
As a precautionary measure, EASA has published today an Airworthiness Directive, effective as of 2787:22013 UTC, suspending all flight operations of all Boeing Model 2100-20137 MAX and 20137-7373 MAX aeroplanes in Europe.
"If the haze comes, then aeroplanes cannot get through and land, which will stop the athletes," he said on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Rainforest Summit in Yogyakarta, on the Indonesian island of Java.
China, the world's biggest producer of aluminum - used in aeroplanes, cars and beverage cans - ordered smelters in 23 of its smoggiest northern cities to cut output by 20183 percent from mid-November to mid-March.
"With practical hypersonic aeroplanes, a two-hour flight to anywhere in the world will be possible" while the cost of space travel could be cut by 99 per cent with reusable spacecraft technology, Jiang wrote.
Airships have a long history stretching back to the nineteenth century, although their use was curtailed by competition from aeroplanes in the twentieth century and high-profile accidents such as the Hindenburg disaster in 1937.
"Regardless whether we are talking about aeroplanes, ships or semiconductors, the United States is ahead of China so China needs to focus on designing and manufacturing technology," he said, noting that this was Foxconn's focus.
Proposals by some scientists to spray chemicals such as sulfur high in the atmosphere from aeroplanes have won more attention since Paris as a relatively cheap fix, costing perhaps $1 billion to $10 billion a year.
"Aeroplanes landing on beaches has been done and STOL competitions have existed almost since the aeroplane has existed itself, all we are doing is put the two together," said Sam Rutherford, the organizer of the event.
FARNBOROUGH, England (Reuters) - With UK factories working at full tilt to meet bumper demand for aeroplanes, aerospace executives have been quick to brush aside fears of any imminent threat from Britain's exit from the European Union.
Not to assume too much about the seriousness of Malek's relationship with this vehicle, but being in love with one's car is an established fetish called mechanophilia, and includes sexual attraction to bikes, helicopters, ships, and aeroplanes.
"We were trying to produce the exact same fuel so we will be able to use the exact same infrastructure and the same aeroplanes that we are using today," Christoph Falter, a researcher at Bauhaus Luftfahrt, said.
Giving the example of the 2017 floods in Sri Lanka, Teplitz said the government had sought help from the United States and it brought in relief supplies but the aeroplanes transporting them required clearance from the government.
Airships have a long history stretching back to the 19th century, although their popularity dipped in the face of competition from aeroplanes in the 20th century and high-profile accidents such as the Hindenburg disaster in 1937.
The crash, which followed another at Indonesia's Lion Air involving the same model last year, has led many countries to ground the 737 MAX aeroplanes, but Moody's said the accident would not affect Boeing's rating "at this time".
Rolls, whose main business makes engines for large aeroplanes, had guided to group operating profit of 400 million pounds, give or take 100 million pounds, and free cash flow of 450 million pounds, give or take 100 million pounds.
Next, perhaps, is Amol Yadav, who for much of the past decade has been building aeroplanes on the roof of the Mumbai flat he shares with 18 family members, and battling the Indian authorities to let him fly them.
In "The Rise and Fall of American Growth", published in January, Mr Gordon argues that the IT revolution is a minor diversion compared with the inventions that accompanied the second industrial one—electricity, motor cars and aeroplanes—which changed lives profoundly.
Britain is planning to use aeroplanes and fast-track trucks to ensure the continued supply of medicines if it leaves the European Union without a deal, Hancock said, and will give preference to medicines in the face of competing pressures.
In Britain Colin Clark, an enterprising civil servant, had been collecting statistics on national income since the 1920s, and in 1940 John Maynard Keynes made a plea for more detailed figures on Britain's capacity to make guns, tanks and aeroplanes.
Airlines are charting new courses: Ryanair will divert $1 billion of investment in new aeroplanes from Britain towards the rest of the EU, and Wizz, a Hungarian rival, says it will make no more investments in Britain after the winter.
He was at the Treasury on Black Wednesday in 1992, when the pound was forced out of the European exchange-rate mechanism, and in Downing Street in 2001 when the aeroplanes hit the twin towers and the decision was taken to invade Iraq.
While other children her age were drawing fanciful aeroplanes and sports cars, Kenner was making thoughtful plans for a convertible roof that would go over the folding rumble seat of a car, where back-seat passengers were usually exposed to the elements.
"Air Zimbabwe must put their house in order and as long as they don't put their house in order, these planes I can lease to any third party who can pay treasury the lease fees for the utilizations of the aeroplanes," Chinamasa said.
Strikes are not uncommon in aviation — British Airways' cabin crew staged 85 days of industrial action across 2016-17 — but Ryanair's are particularly damaging, as the airline is unable or unwilling to take expensive mitigation measures such as hiring replacement aeroplanes with external crews.
Paolo Bianco, who heads the quantum-technology research team at Airbus, a big European aerospace firm, says that quantum-simulating a new material such as a stiffer or lighter alloy for use in aeroplanes or satellites would be much faster and cheaper than manufacturing and then testing the material itself.
This does not mean that three decades from now Swedes must emit no planet-heating substances; even if all their electricity came from renewables and they only drove Teslas, they would presumably still want to fly in aeroplanes, or use cement and fertiliser, the making of which releases plenty of carbon dioxide.
In Mr Stach's telling, this insecurity was compounded by threats that the observant and highly sensitive Kafka found in the world: an education system based on rigorous exams, and the risk of failing them; a society beset by tensions between Czechs and Germans, in which Jews were often the scapegoats; and new-fangled machines like aeroplanes, which both delighted and terrified the young author.

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