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Answer for the clue "A hose that carries air under pressure ", 7 letters:
airline

Alternative clues for the word airline

Word definitions for airline in dictionaries

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a hose that carries air under pressure [syn: air hose ] a commercial enterprise that provides scheduled flights for passengers [syn: airline business , airway ]

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
An airline is a company that provides air transport services for passengers or freight. Airline may also refer to:

Usage examples of airline.

Boeing or Airbus may or may not install these items for the airline, depending on the contract.

One after another, gathered hard drives were being tucked away for hard travel in the antistatic, airline- and gorilla-proof cases.

Bretti did not loosen his grip on his airline seat until the small plane had landed safely at the Bangalore airport.

Nicholas Bretti did not loosen his grip on his airline seat until the small plane had landed safely at the Bangalore airport.

Max Bhagat had asked for both of them by name, requesting that they join a small group of FBI agents accompanying him to Kazbekistan to observe the negotiation and the actual takedown of the hijacked World Airlines flight.

From another pocket of the case he pulled out a one-way ticket on Philippines Airline Flight 434 from Manila to Cebu City in the southern Philippines.

Nichols stayed in Cebu City from late November until January 16, 1995 - the same period when Yousef was in Manila planning the plot against the pope, the Bojinka airline bombings, and the suicide hijackings.

He had flown to Madrid, then took a connecting flight on Iberian Airlines to La Coruna, in Galicia.

Grabbing the Yellow Pages and her address book, she got on the phone to caterers, musicians, airlines, florists, the King Croesus, personalized shopping services, Mrs.

I shook hands at the curbside luggage drop in front of the area marked for American Airlines.

Jamilla and I shook hands at the curbside luggage drop in front of the area marked for American Airlines.

In the past few years most airlines in America had reduced the number of flights made each day in order to get the maximum use out of their equipment, so most U.

He ordered all American Airlines flights in the Northeast that had not taken off to remain on the ground.

He could have learned of this from messages being sent by United Airlines to the cockpits of its transcontinental flights, including Flight 93, warning of cockpit intrusion and telling of the New York attacks.

Gentry did not like or trust Richard Haines, but he knew no reason for the FBI to suspect a Charleston sheriff in either the airline explosion or Mansard House murders.