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German aircraft engineer who designed the first all-metal airplane (1859-1935)
Answer for the clue "German aircraft engineer who designed the first all-metal airplane (1859-1935) ", 7 letters:
junkers
Alternative clues for the word junkers
Word definitions for junkers in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. (plural of junker English)
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Junkers Flugzeug- und Motorenwerke AG ( JFM , earlier JCO or JKO in World War I ), more commonly Junkers , was a major German aircraft and aircraft engine manufacturer. It produced some of the world's most innovative and best-known airplanes over the course ...
Usage examples of junkers.
The doors to one of them stood open revealing the three engines and distinctive corrugated metal fuselage of a JU52, the Junkers transport plane that was the workhorse of the German Army.
Necker recognized Heider and then saw a bandaged sailor being taken from the personnel carrier by two soldiers who led him to the Junkers and helped him inside.
A hundred yards away on the port side flying parallel with them he saw a Junkers 88S, one of those deadly black twin-engined planes that had caused such catastrophic losses to RAF Bomber Command in the night skies of Europe.
He pushed the column forward, going down in a steep dive into the cloud layer below, and the Junkers 88S roared overhead, passing like a dark shadow.
They rocked again in the turbulence as the Junkers 88S passed over them.
The Junkers 88S swooped in on their tail again, and Sorsa hauled back the column and started to climb.
The pilot of the Junkers 888 banked steeply to avoid what seemed like an inevitable collision, but at that height and speed had nowhere else to go but straight down into the waves below.
He spun around, took a couple of steps back toward the Junkers, then sank on his knees and rolled over.
Many junkers think prices go up if a dealer is friendly, and if his shop is clean.
There was no telling how many junkers had been in and out of the driveway.
That little problem you had about Dorniers or Junkers surviving over the Norfolk coast.
He was flying a Junkers 88 in heavy cloud, one of those apparently clumsy, black, twin-engined planes festooned with strange radar aerials, that had proved so devastating in their attacks on RAF bombing groups engaged on night raids over Europe.
A package tour organised by Strength-Through-Joy, perhaps: two hours in a Junkers jet with a stop-off in Warsaw.
At the end of the runway, as the Junkers turned, the moisture scudded across the window, leaving threads of droplets.
Albrechtson saw three lines of tracer converge on another Junkers two hundreds away.