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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
landing
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
crash landing
▪ He was forced to make a crash-landing in the desert.
forced landing
▪ The plane had to make a forced landing in a field.
landing craft
landing gear
landing net
landing stage
landing strip
launch/landing/helicopter pad
▪ The hospital has built a helicopter pad.
soft landing
▪ Hopes for a soft landing have faded.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
emergency
▪ When we looked upwards again, we were amazed to see all three Fulmars still flying but firing emergency landing signals.
▪ The lake was acceptable for emergency landing, but not for take-off.
forced
▪ The pilot saw a field ahead and slightly left of the aircraft which he considered the best forced landing area.
▪ Callaghan had made a forced landing in a field, but they had seen him get out.
▪ He called the aircraft and was advised that both engines had flamed out and that a forced landing would be necessary.
▪ A turn to the left off the runway heading was made to bring the aircraft over land for the forced landing.
▪ Both engines failed due to bird ingestion and the aircraft made a forced landing in a field beyond the end of the runway.
safe
▪ If there is a possible area for a safe landing, use the brakes and get down into it.
▪ Beware of snow showers, because they can reduce visibility to a few yards, making a safe landing impossible.
▪ He should have Felt his way, tip-toe, his toes Tucked up under his nose For a safe landing.
▪ This is always dangerous because at that moment the glider has insufficient speed to allow for safe recovery and landing.
soft
▪ He had a soft landing on rough ground, and the foliage closed up again behind him.
■ NOUN
area
▪ The pilot saw a field ahead and slightly left of the aircraft which he considered the best forced landing area.
▪ So all was clear at the spaceport landing area.
▪ Choose a line feature along the landing area, with a mark or line across for the touch down point.
craft
▪ Group 4 was a floating reserve lying offshore in their landing craft until required to reinforce one of the other Groups.
▪ These constraints put out of the question any prospect of training fully fledged navigators for the thousands of landing craft crews.
▪ Jitters had been wounded early, and washed back to the landing craft.
crash
▪ He also survived five crash landings.
▪ An unnecessary signal: the radios had been dead since the crash landing.
▪ He says that wasn't bad for a crash landing.
▪ Read in studio A glider pilot has suffered a broken leg in a crash landing at an R-A-F base.
▪ This could and did result in nasty crash landings which could set the bombs off.
fee
▪ The flying club and bar offers a friendly greeting and place to pay the small landing fee.
▪ The club charges about £2.50 landing fee and sell aircraft fuel sweets and drinks.
▪ Eurocheques are accepted for fuel, but for landing fees it is strictly cash.
field
▪ Many field landing accidents occur because the initial decision to choose a field is left far too late.
▪ Your very first field landing could even turn out to be the most difficult field of your whole gliding career.
▪ Failure to accept that a field landing is necessary Be realistic about the chances of finding lift low down.
gear
▪ The Dowty group will provide twenty five million pounds worth of fuel systems and landing gear for the Tornado.
▪ They entered service with engraved foil type recorders, usually fitted in the landing gear bay.
▪ Boxes of new T-6 main landing gears and P-40 tail wheel assemblies were located and utilised in the mock-ups.
▪ The landing gear is also a touch fighter-style - tall, thin and hard.
▪ Was the landing gear up or down, or was one leg out of phase with the other?
▪ Fibreglass wheel pants were moulded and fitted to the landing gears and fake cowl flaps were attached to a re-worked AT-6 cowling.
moon
▪ As space technology, Bio2 is the most thrilling news since the moon landings.
net
▪ My chair and everything apart from the rod, landing net and loaf, are left up the bank.
▪ As the trout began to tire, I fumbled for the landing net.
▪ They got their rods and landing nets together and set off for home.
▪ Then I fetch my rod, landing net, loaf and rod-rest.
▪ Use a large landing net, somewhat larger than the size of fish you hope to catch.
▪ You need only one landing net, one keepnet, one set of scales, etc. if you fish close to each other.
pad
▪ It might have been a loading bay, or a landing pad for one-person fliers.
▪ The tennis courts act as helicopter landing pads.
▪ The health authority has recognised that and has sought an alternative and more convenient landing pad.
place
▪ Our shore controls continued to watch the original landing place.
▪ You'd need the landing place.
▪ Our brief but interesting tour completed we returned to the landing place, negotiating the slippery descent with caution.
▪ Viking was gently warped into the landing place where she was soon securely moored with her bow overhanging the rocks.
site
▪ Here is a gravitational field device to draw down orbiting objects on to a preprogrammed landing site.
▪ Direct sampling of the dust at various landing sites has indicated that it extends downwards for at least a metre or so.
▪ No thorough reconnaissance of the landing sites had been possible and maps had largely been taken from tourist guide books.
stage
▪ The new station is inconvenient to pedestrians, being a considerable walk from the ferries' landing stage.
▪ A short stroll leads to Menaggio's ferry landing stage.
▪ Sir Gregory, Amyas and two menservants were to take him down to the landing stage where a boat was waiting.
▪ The hotel is set in a quiet back street with its own landing stage and a tiny pavement terrace.
▪ He built the Stone Quay both as a landing stage and promenade.
▪ Burkett's daughter would saddle up a horse and ride down the east shore of Derwent Water to the Lodore landing stage.
▪ It took half an hour before she came across it, moored by a small wooden landing stage.
▪ Around £300,000 a year has been spent patching up its ageing landing stage.
strip
▪ In December 1991 he often visited a nearby farm landing strip and talked to microlight owners and examined their aircraft.
▪ At Dungavel House, where the Duke of Hamilton had his residence, there was a private landing strip.
▪ The landing strip had been described to me in some detail.
▪ He has overshot the landing strip again.
▪ It is certainly an aircraft that requires a good sized landing strip as approaches have to be made fairly flat.
▪ It's used as a landing strip for emergencies only by the Luftwaffe.
▪ He was directed towards a glider landing strip, but he appears to have clipped a tree and then crashed on farmland.
▪ It dips its wings in acknowledgement of the landing strip, and circles, preparing to land.
window
▪ Mrs Blakey, recognizing that something was wrong, rapped sharply on the landing window and beckoned at the children.
▪ The landing window was cobalt-blue velvet, set with stars.
▪ Damned creatures - Harold had been leaving the landing window open again.
▪ He pulled open the landing window and edged out on to the ledge which ran around the block.
▪ Terry was standing at the landing window, Rose just retreating down the stairs.
■ VERB
force
▪ Bad weather can force an emergency landing or strong winds can blow them off course.
▪ In 15 of those flights, pilots were forced to make unscheduled landings.
make
▪ And it won't just be the pilots who are out to make the best landings.
▪ In 15 of those flights, pilots were forced to make unscheduled landings.
▪ He was very naturally scared stiff of using up all his remaining petrol and making a bad landing.
▪ Seven times the aircraft made unscheduled landings.
▪ Also unplanned but unforgettable is one of the B-17s making a one-wheeled landing.
▪ A person who is scared of ballooning will nearly always fly the aircraft on to the ground instead of making well held-off landings.
▪ Callaghan had made a forced landing in a field, but they had seen him get out.
reach
▪ She knew it before she had reached the landing.
▪ Then she retraced her steps, pausing, as she so often did, when she reached the landing.
▪ We reached the landing field towards dusk, landed, fitted on our parachutes and decided to jump in the failing light.
▪ On reaching a landing, she dithered.
▪ His head banged against the wall when they reached the landing, but for some reason it didn't hurt at all.
▪ As he reached the landing he paused, looking around at the five closed doors that faced him.
▪ As she reached the landing, she heard a sound in her room.
▪ I reach the landing and stand outside the door, key poised, listening.
stand
▪ She stood on the landing, maybe a minute, maybe half an hour, staring at the window.
▪ Trailing after her, Ellie stood on the landing, and listened.
▪ She stood on the landing, watching him as he went down the stairs and out by the side door.
▪ Terry was standing at the landing window, Rose just retreating down the stairs.
▪ He was standing on the landing at the top, face white.
▪ A door stood ajar on the landing and Carrie saw the bottom end of a silk-covered bed and drawn, silken curtains.
walk
▪ Jack walked back up to the landing and put his arm around his daughter.
▪ He Was stumbling as he walked across the landing.
▪ Carrie shuddered as she walked along the landing to one of the rear front doors.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ the first landing of settlers in America
The Collaborative International Dictionary
landing

Halfpace \Half"pace`\ (-p[=a]s`), n. (Arch.) A platform of a staircase where the stair turns back in exactly the reverse direction of the lower flight. See Quarterpace.

Note: This term and quarterpace are rare or unknown in the United States, platform or landing being used instead.

landing

Land \Land\, n. [AS. land, lond; akin to D., G., Icel., Sw., Dan., and Goth. land. ]

  1. The solid part of the surface of the earth; -- opposed to water as constituting a part of such surface, especially to oceans and seas; as, to sight land after a long voyage.

    They turn their heads to sea, their sterns to land.
    --Dryden.

  2. Any portion, large or small, of the surface of the earth, considered by itself, or as belonging to an individual or a people, as a country, estate, farm, or tract.

    Go view the land, even Jericho.
    --Josh. ii. 1.

    Ill fares the land, to hastening ills a prey, Where wealth accumulates and men decay.
    --Goldsmith.

    Note: In the expressions ``to be, or dwell, upon land,'' ``to go, or fare, on land,'' as used by Chaucer, land denotes the country as distinguished from the town.

    A poor parson dwelling upon land [i.e., in the country].
    --Chaucer.

  3. Ground, in respect to its nature or quality; soil; as, wet land; good or bad land.

  4. The inhabitants of a nation or people.

    These answers, in the silent night received, The king himself divulged, the land believed.
    --Dryden.

  5. The mainland, in distinction from islands.

  6. The ground or floor. [Obs.]

    Herself upon the land she did prostrate.
    --Spenser.

  7. (Agric.) The ground left unplowed between furrows; any one of several portions into which a field is divided for convenience in plowing.

  8. (Law) Any ground, soil, or earth whatsoever, as meadows, pastures, woods, etc., and everything annexed to it, whether by nature, as trees, water, etc., or by the hand of man, as buildings, fences, etc.; real estate.
    --Kent. Bouvier. Burrill.

  9. (Naut.) The lap of the strakes in a clinker-built boat; the lap of plates in an iron vessel; -- called also landing.
    --Knight.

  10. In any surface prepared with indentations, perforations, or grooves, that part of the surface which is not so treated, as the level part of a millstone between the furrows, or the surface of the bore of a rifled gun between the grooves. Land agent, a person employed to sell or let land, to collect rents, and to attend to other money matters connected with land. Land boat, a vehicle on wheels propelled by sails. Land blink, a peculiar atmospheric brightness seen from sea over distant snow-covered land in arctic regions. See Ice blink. Land breeze. See under Breeze. Land chain. See Gunter's chain. Land crab (Zo["o]l.), any one of various species of crabs which live much on the land, and resort to the water chiefly for the purpose of breeding. They are abundant in the West Indies and South America. Some of them grow to a large size. Land fish a fish on land; a person quite out of place. --Shak. Land force, a military force serving on land, as distinguished from a naval force. Land, ho! (Naut.), a sailor's cry in announcing sight of land. Land ice, a field of ice adhering to the coast, in distinction from a floe. Land leech (Zo["o]l.), any one of several species of blood-sucking leeches, which, in moist, tropical regions, live on land, and are often troublesome to man and beast. Land measure, the system of measurement used in determining the area of land; also, a table of areas used in such measurement. Land of bondage or House of bondage, in Bible history, Egypt; by extension, a place or condition of special oppression. Land o' cakes, Scotland. Land of Nod, sleep. Land of promise, in Bible history, Canaan: by extension, a better country or condition of which one has expectation. Land of steady habits, a nickname sometimes given to the State of Connecticut. Land office, a government office in which the entries upon, and sales of, public land are registered, and other business respecting the public lands is transacted. [U.S.] Land pike. (Zo["o]l.)

    1. The gray pike, or sauger.

    2. The Menobranchus. Land service, military service as distinguished from naval service. Land rail. (Zo["o]l)

      1. The crake or corncrake of Europe. See Crake.

      2. An Australian rail ( Hypot[ae]nidia Phillipensis); -- called also pectoral rail. Land scrip, a certificate that the purchase money for a certain portion of the public land has been paid to the officer entitled to receive it. [U.S.] Land shark, a swindler of sailors on shore. [Sailors' Cant] Land side

        1. That side of anything in or on the sea, as of an island or ship, which is turned toward the land.

        2. The side of a plow which is opposite to the moldboard and which presses against the unplowed land.

          Land snail (Zo["o]l.), any snail which lives on land, as distinguished from the aquatic snails are Pulmonifera, and belong to the Geophila; but the operculated land snails of warm countries are Di[oe]cia, and belong to the T[ae]nioglossa. See Geophila, and Helix.

          Land spout, a descent of cloud and water in a conical form during the occurrence of a tornado and heavy rainfall on land.

          Land steward, a person who acts for another in the management of land, collection of rents, etc.

          Land tortoise, Land turtle (Zo["o]l.), any tortoise that habitually lives on dry land, as the box tortoise. See Tortoise.

          Land warrant, a certificate from the Land Office, authorizing a person to assume ownership of a public land.

          Land wind. Same as Land breeze (above).

          To make land (Naut.), to sight land.

          To set the land, to see by the compass how the land bears from the ship.

          To shut in the land, to hide the land, as when fog, or an intervening island, obstructs the view.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
landing

c.1600, place for boats; of stairs, first attested 1789; from present participle of land (v.1).

Wiktionary
landing

n. 1 corridor 2 coming to earth, as of an airplane or any descending object 3 a place on a shoreline where a boat lands 4 The level part of a staircase, at the top of a flight of stairs, or connecting one flight with another. vb. (present participle of land English)

WordNet
landing
  1. n. an intermediate platform in a staircase

  2. structure providing a place where boats can land people or goods [syn: landing place]

  3. the act of coming down to the earth (or other surface); "the plane made a smooth landing"; "his landing on his feet was catlike"

  4. the act of coming to land after a voyage

Gazetteer
Wikipedia
Landing

Landing is the last part of a flight, where a flying animal, aircraft, or spacecraft returns to the ground. When the flying object returns to water, the process is called alighting, although it is commonly called "landing," "touchdown" or " splashdown" as well. A normal aircraft flight would include several parts of flight including taxi, takeoff, climb, cruise, descent and landing.

Landing (band)

Landing is an American indie rock outfit from Connecticut, United States. Terms used to describe the music created by Aaron Snow and Adrienne Snow include ambient, shoegaze, slowcore, and space rock. Past members have included Dick Baldwin (guitar, bass) and Peter Baumann (not the same musician who was once a member of Tangerine Dream). The most current line up features Daron Gardner (bass) and John Miller (drums, guitar).

Originally named May Landing as a duo, the group changed the name to Landing in 1998 with the additions of Dick Baldwin (guitar, bass), Daron Gardner (bass, drums).

Landing returned June 2012 with the release of their eighth LP and first LP on Geographic North, entitled Landing. The nine songs were written and recorded over the six-year hiatus following Gravitational IV. "Heart Finds the Beat" was the first single released off the album.

Landing (disambiguation)

Landing is the arrival of an aircraft or spacecraft to the ground.

Landing may also refer to:

  • Landing, New Jersey, an unincorporated area in Roxbury Township
  • Landing Creek (New Jersey), a tributary of the Mullica River in southern New Jersey
  • Landing Creek (South Dakota)
  • Landing (band), an American indie rock band
  • Landing (water transport), a water terminal for river transport lines, such as for ferries or cargo
  • Landing operation, the deployment of military troops to the ground
  • Landing, an intermediate floor between flights in a stairway, or at the top or bottom of a staircase
  • Landing (series), a series of arcade flight simulator video games
  • Landing Sané (born 1990), a French basketball player
  • Ed Landing (born 1949), an American geologist and paleontologist
Landing (series)

Landing is a series of arcade flight simulator video games by Taito. Almost all games were released for arcade, except Jet de go! series only released for PlayStation.

Landing (water transport)

A landing is a water terminal for river transport lines, such as for ferries, steamboats or cargo ships.

A notable example is the historic Public Landing on the north bank of the Ohio River in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. In the age of steamboat transport, the public landing was frequently jammed with riverboat traffic with 5,000 arrivals and departures per season.

Usage examples of "landing".

She slung her Uzi over her shoulder then abseiled down, landing silently on the floor below.

All they knew they learned from aerograms, one from Admiral Durenne off the Isle of Wight saying that the Portsmouth forts had been silenced and the Fleet action had begun, and another from the Commodore of the squadron off Folkestone saying that all was going well, and the landing would shortly be effected: and thus they fully expected to have the three towns and the entrance to the Thames at their mercy by the following day.

He noted distances from friendly forts, fuel supplies, possible landing areas and traced the known route of the escaping Afghanis to the last known point nearly half-way along the Khyber.

The bomb aimer was supposed to tome up on to the main flight-deck for the landing but I always stayed down in the nose in case the pilot needed any last-minute guidance.

Should the weather deteriorate sufficiently to endanger our return flight we have been ordered to make a landing on the airfield near the town of Kalinin.

And though a landing aboard the carrier at night in bad weather was far and above the most challenging feat of airmanship one could attempt, making the same approach on a fixed, unmoving airfield posed a different kind of threat--just as deadly, but far more subtle.

Suddenly Mandel and Akela were thrust back by an invisible force, both landing on their backsides, sprawled on the lawn.

It spun and bucked, alighting on stiffened legs, and Hilliard took flight, landing flat in a muddy puddle a full yard away.

There are to be no interruptions or discussions about anything other than the operation and safety of the flight from takeoff until 10,000-feet altitude, and again from 10,000 feet down until landing.

If Sardinia were chosen, he could probably be ready by October, but he did not expect to be able to invade the mainland of Italy before November, and by then the weather might be too bad for amphibious landings.

Committee of Arrangements of the New England Society respectfully invite you to be present at the seventy-fifth anniversary of the Society, and the two hundred and sixtieth of the landing of the Pilgrims at Metropolitan Concert Hall.

I hoped, under cover of that mistake, to escape one or the other, but I find that each claims its day to be the genuine anniversary of the landing of their Fathers on Plymouth Rock.

They coasted in toward the wharf between the two landing craft, and Aragon threw the lines up to the waiting soldiers.

By now she would be landing on Travancore, to face not a Simmie Artefact but the real Morgan Construct.

The Ataman had completed sea trials and aircraft landing operations in July of 1998, and been sent immediately to the Pacific Ocean Fleet.