| aerial | (adj) existing or living or growing or operating in the air, Example: aerial roots of a philodendron; aerial particles; small aerial creatures such as butterflies; aerial warfare; aerial photography; aerial cable cars |
| aerialist | (n) an acrobat who performs in the air (as on a rope or trapeze) |
| aerial ladder | (n) mechanically extendible ladder; used on a fire truck |
| aerially | (adv) by means of aircraft, Example: the survey was carried out aerially |
| aerial torpedo | (n) a torpedo designed to be launched from an airplane |
| aerides | (n) any orchid of the genus Aerides |
| aerie | (n) the lofty nest of a bird of prey (such as a hawk or eagle), Syn. eyrie, eyry, aery |
| aerie | (n) any habitation at a high altitude, Syn. eyrie, eyry, aery |
| aeriferous | (adj) conveying air; as the bronchial tubes |
| aeriform | (adj) resembling air or having the form of air, Syn. airlike |
| Aerial |
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| aerial | n.
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| aerialist | n. |
| Aerial railway | . |
| Aerial sickness | . A sickness felt by aëronauts due to high speed of flights and rapidity in changing altitudes, combining some symptoms of mountain sickness and some of seasickness. The nauseous symptoms similar to seasickness experienced by passengers in pressurized aircraft is called |
| aerides | n. |
| Aerie | n. [ OE. aire, eire, air, nest, also origin, descent, OF. aire, LL. area, aera, nest of a bird of prey, perh. fr. L. area an open space (for birds of prey like to build their nests on flat and open spaces on the top of high rocks). Cf. Area. ] The nest of a bird of prey, as of an eagle or hawk; also a brood of such birds; eyrie. Shak. Also fig.: A human residence or resting place perched like an eagle's nest. [ 1913 Webster ] |