Online Google Dictionary

aileron 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Noun
/ˈāləˌrän/,
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ailerons, plural;
  1. A hinged surface in the trailing edge of an airplane wing, used to control lateral balance


  1. an airfoil that controls lateral motion
  2. Ailerons are hinged control surfaces attached to the trailing edge of the wing of a fixed-wing aircraft. The ailerons are used to control the aircraft in roll. ...
  3. (The Ailerons) The Ailerons are an indie rock band featuring Charity Hair, Daniel Beattie, Dave Rowntree (drummer of English band Blur), Grog Prebble and Mike Smith.
  4. hinged part on trailing edge of an airplane wing. Used to control lateral turns
  5. (Ailerons) the moving section of the trailing edge of the wing, located towards the outer end or they can be the whole length of the TE. Ailerons come in pairs, (left and right) and always work in opposite directions to each other (one up, one down). ...
  6. (Ailerons) They are hinged on the wings and move downward to push the air down and make the wing tilt up.
  7. (Ailerons) control the roll of an airplane.
  8. (ailerons) Hinged portions of the trailing edges of a wing which can change the wing's lifting properties.
  9. A hinged surface on the wing of an aircraft or spacecraft used to adjust the craft's angle of flight.
  10. Control surface located on the outboard section of the wings that deflect up or down to increase or decrease the lift produced by each wing and produce a rolling motion.
  11. Control surface attached to wingtip trailing edge (or between wingtips on some early biplanes) to provide control in roll about the aircraft's longitudinal axis.
  12. A small hinged portion of an airplane’s wing, used to make an airplane roll, or turn around its long axis.
  13. A hinged control surface on the wing that scares the hell out of airline passengers when it moves.
  14. a movable surface on an aircraft wing, it is used to control rolling
  15. A movable surface on the back of the wings that changes the roll of the airplane.
  16. The Ailerons are used to control the roll or banking of the plane. Normally they are interconnected so that when one goes down the other goes up.
  17. On an aircraft, the control surface that influences movement of the aircraft along it’s roll axis. While a helicopter lacks true ailerons, the pitch of the main rotors is manipulated in such a way as to have the same effect.
  18. A control surface on fixed-wing aircraft, usually mounted on the aft edge of wings, that controls roll, and is controlled by the wheel; SYMBOLS: delta sub A; TYPICAL UNITS: rad, deg;
  19. Airplane equivalent of left/right cyclic. Although a helicopter can provide cyclic movement in all directions around the mast,not just left/right roll, this can still be a useful concept for pilot orientation.
  20. A control surface for controlling roll or bank. There is one aileron on each wing, and they move in opposite directions. They are controlled by turning the control yoke, like a car's steering wheel.
  21. hinged portion of a wing, designed to impart roll to the aircraft.
  22. Typically a term used in airplanes, it can also describe the Left/Right pitching motion that enables a heli to roll or turn during forward flight.
  23. The movable areas of a wingform that control or affect the roll of an aircraft by working opposite one another—up-aileron on the right wing and down-aileron on the left wing. French: aileron small wing, diminutive of aile, from Latin: ala, wing. The word "aisle" also derives from the same root. ...
  24. A pair of control surfaces found on an airplanes wings. One per wing to control roll rate.