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A Bounty of November Vocabulary: Flying High: Vocab for National Aviation Month

Is your vocabulary on autopilot? Learn these terms related to aviation, and you'll soar to new lexical heights. You might even get upgraded to first class!
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Full list of words from this list:

  1. aerial
    existing, living, growing, or operating in the air
    Live aerial video footage broadcast by KABC-TV showed tall flames raging along a ridge-line at the edge of a neighborhood, burning perilously close to several homes as authorities urged residents to flee. Reuters (Oct 21, 2019)
    If you shoot video from a drone, that's aerial footage. An antenna sticking up out of a car or house to pick up radio or TV signals is also called an aerial, though in the age of satellites and wifi that use of the word is an endangered species. That may be for the best, because crashing your drone into your neighbor's TV aerial would be a drag.
  2. aerodynamics
    the branch of mechanics that deals with the motion of gases
    It's in this zone that the stability of the car will transition from being governed by the interaction of the wheels with the lakebed surface to being controlled by the vehicle's aerodynamics. BBC (Oct 1, 2019)
    We get our word "air" from the Greek aero, and like aerial above and aeronautics below it can be combined with other roots to make new words. Many scientific terms originate in Greek; in this case adding dinamis, the Greek word for "power", creates this branch of engineering devoted to making vehicles pass through the air with minimal resistance. Ferraris and fighter planes represent excellent examples of aerodynamic vehicles.
  3. aeronautics
    the theory and practice of navigation through air or space
    There might be some technologies there, and again it might just be a facility for testing advanced aeronautics. Slate (Aug 16, 2019)
    Yet another aero- word, this one ends in something you may recognize if you know the word "nautical". Nautikos is Greek for "sailor", so aeronautics means "sailing through the air". The first "A" in NASA stands for aeronautics.
  4. altitude
    elevation above sea level or above the earth's surface
    The satellites are intended to be staggered at different heights above the Earth including altitudes of 340 miles and 710 miles. Fox News (Oct 21, 2019)
  5. aviation
    the art of operating aircraft
    And Honda’s aviation gamble, three decades in the making, is transferring new know-how into other divisions, Fujino said, adding that - as with autonomous vehicles - designing an airplane is only half the task. Washington Times (Oct 21, 2019)
  6. cockpit
    compartment where the pilot sits while flying an aircraft
    Flight simulators replicate real cockpits and are used to test planes during development. New York Times (Oct 18, 2019)
  7. compass
    navigational instrument for finding directions
    On their hunt for just under 200 hidden checkpoints, they will rely on map and compass skills, as well as driving prowess, physical stamina and more. New York Times (Oct 3, 2019)
  8. delta
    an object shaped like an equilateral triangle
    “The deltas — anything triangle-shaped — are dependable flyers, easy for kids, and probably our No. 1 seller, in the $20 sweet spot.” Seattle Times (May 1, 2019)
    The fourth letter of the Greek alphabet, Delta, is shaped like a triangle. It's used in math and physics to stand for different things; in the latter it represents "change". But for the purposes of this list, it refers to planes with wings shaped like a huge triangle. It's a shape often seen in supersonic aircraft like fighter planes.
  9. descent
    a movement downward
    Another stage, called the descent element, takes the crew from low lunar orbit to the surface. BBC (Oct 22, 2019)
  10. fuselage
    the central body of an airplane holding crew and passengers
    For example, a virtual aircraft might incorporate a 3D model of the fuselage with one of a fault-diagnosis system and one monitoring the air conditioning and pressurization. Nature (Sep 24, 2019)
  11. joystick
    an upright handle used by a pilot to control an airplane
    Remotely operated vehicles, or R.O.V.s, are controlled by shipboard pilots using joysticks. The New Yorker (May 28, 2019)
    You likely know this word from your game controller, but it originated in the early days of flight, around 1910, as the slang term for the vertical control lever in an airplane.
  12. lavatory
    a room or building equipped with one or more toilets
    His biggest annoyance with turbulence now is not being able to get up to use the lavatory. Washington Post (Oct 11, 2019)
    From the Latin lavatorium meaning "a place to wash", lavatory evolved into a term for sinks or washbasins, which is still in use. Eventually lavatory became the name for a bathroom on an airplane, though "purgatory" might be more appropriate, especially at the end of a long flight.
  13. stratosphere
    atmospheric layer between the troposphere and the mesosphere
    Warming of the stratosphere above the south pole will influence weather in the Southern Hemisphere for several months. Nature (Oct 6, 2019)
  14. taxi
    travel or cause to travel slowly along the ground
    Shortly after 3:30 a.m. local time, they began to taxi for takeoff. Los Angeles Times (Oct 14, 2019)
    You probably know this word refers to taxicabs, but it's also the word that describe's an aircraft's movement on the ground between the gate and the runway. A taximeter is the device in a cab that records the distance traveled and thus the fare; taxi was used to describe the movement of planes on the ground because cabs would also drive slowly when looking for passengers.
  15. turbine
    an engine that causes a bladed rotor to rotate
    Both fuel cells and gas turbines usually rely on another grid — the highly reliable network of natural gas pipelines beneath the ground. New York Times (Oct 12, 2019)
    Old-fashioned water wheels are turbines, and so are jet engines and the huge generators in power plants. The Latin word turbo, meaning "tornado" or "something that turns around an axis", is also used as-is to describe a booster in some car engines.
  16. turbulence
    instability in the atmosphere
    His biggest annoyance with turbulence now is not being able to get up to use the lavatory. Washington Post (Oct 11, 2019)
    Another turbo-rooted word, turbulence refers to choppy winds that cause the plane you're on to bounce and buck, sometimes pretty severely. Water can also be called turbulent — think rapids — and if water is murky or muddy, turbid would be a good word to describe it.
Created on Tue Oct 22 13:05:21 EDT 2019 (updated Wed Oct 30 19:18:41 EDT 2019)

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