flying
noun
- Pokémon type
- fly through the air, travel via air, fly in a flock.,
adjective
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L336862 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈflaɪ.ɪŋ/
adj
Etymology: From Middle English fleynge, fleeʒinge, flihinde, vlyinde, vleoinde, flyand, ffleghand, flighand (also fleoninde, fleonninde, etc.), from Old English flēogende, from Proto-Germanic *fleugandz (“flying”), present participle of Proto-Germanic *fleuganą (“to fly”), equivalent to fly + -ing. Cognate with Saterland Frisian fljoogend (“flying”), West Frisian fleanend (“flying”), Dutch vliegend (“flying”), German Low German flegend (“flying”), German fliegend (“flying”), Danish flyvende (“flying”), Swedish flygande (“flying”), Icelandic fljúgandi (“flying”).
- That flies or can fly.
“flying fox”
“a flying rumour”
- Brief or hurried.
“flying visit”
- Capable of moving rapidly; highly mobile.
“flying column”
- Not secured by yards.
- Capable of foiling.
“Flying ferries are the watercraft of the future!”
- Designating a cattle brand consisting of a letter extended on both sides with tilde-like curved lines.
“He brands his cow W (flying W) or — (two-bar).”
“[…] some seventy-five cows belonging to William and Bernie with a Flying W […]”
- Being able to glide through the air.
“flying squirrel”
“flying snake”
noun
Etymology: From Middle English flyinge, fleyng, fleyinge, fleynge, fleghyng, fleiʒeyng, flyeghynge, equivalent to fly + -ing. Cognate with Danish flyvning (“flying”), Swedish flygning (“flying”), Norwegian flyvning, flygning, flyging, flying (“flying”).
- An act of flight.
“"Flyings" could vary considerably in complexity and lavishness and could involve an actor or property being either lifted from the stage into the flies above or vice versa. As Colin Visser has observed, flyings and sinkings are both "associated with supernatural manifestations of various kinds" […]”
- The action or process of sustained motion through the air.
“His seconde hawke wexyd gery And was with flyenge wery. She had flowyn so oft, That on the rode loft She perkyd her to rest.”
- The action of sustained hydrodynamic lift on hydrofoils lifting the vessel hull lifted out of the water, for sustained motion across water.
verb
Etymology: From Middle English fleynge, fleeʒinge, flihinde, vlyinde, vleoinde, flyand, ffleghand, flighand (also fleoninde, fleonninde, etc.), from Old English flēogende, from Proto-Germanic *fleugandz (“flying”), present participle of Proto-Germanic *fleuganą (“to fly”), equivalent to fly + -ing. Cognate with Saterland Frisian fljoogend (“flying”), West Frisian fleanend (“flying”), Dutch vliegend (“flying”), German Low German flegend (“flying”), German fliegend (“flying”), Danish flyvende (“flying”), Swedish flygande (“flying”), Icelandic fljúgandi (“flying”).
- present participle and gerund of fly