aircraft
An aircraft designed to carry people.
An aircraft propelled by jet engines.
Aircraft used for transporting passengers or cargo for hire.
A military aircraft designed for air-to-air combat.
A military aircraft armed for fighting.
A military aircraft designed to attack ground targets.
A small aircraft, typically used for private flying or training.
Aircraft used for non-military purposes.
Refers to aircraft that generate lift by the forward motion of their wings, as opposed to rotary-wing aircraft like helicopters.
An aircraft without a human pilot on board, often called a drone.
An aircraft used for observing people or places.
An aircraft used for military observation.
An aircraft with two engines.
An aircraft with one engine.
An aircraft with a human pilot on board.
A small-scale replica of an aircraft, often a hobby.
A very small, light, one- or two-seater aircraft.
A very small, light, one- or two-seater aircraft.
A large warship with a flight deck and facilities for carrying, deploying, and recovering aircraft.
The sound produced by aircraft, especially when considered as a form of pollution.
Indicates that an aircraft is moving through the air.
Used to describe an aircraft being in service or functional.
An aircraft leaves the ground and begins to fly.
An aircraft arrives on the ground after a flight.
To pilot or operate an aircraft.
To manage and use an aircraft, often in a professional or commercial context.
To get on an aircraft as a passenger.
To cause an aircraft to fall from the sky by shooting it.
To completely ruin or demolish an aircraft.