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Where executives fly shown by company form
Answer for the clue "Where executives fly shown by company form ", 14 letters:
business class
Word definitions for business class in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Business class is a travel class available on many commercial airlines and rail lines, known by brand names which vary by airline or rail company. In the airline industry, it was originally intended as an intermediate level of service between economy class ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A high-quality class of travelling (especially in airlines), higher than economy class or budget, lower than first class.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ All the while relaxing in one of the biggest business class seats in the business. ▪ Entrepreneurial, internal and finance capitalists Most of Scott's discussion focusses on the core of the business class . ▪ Flying economy class ...
Usage examples of business class.
Of course, when Norris talks about options, he mostly means a better contract, or a bigger dressing room, or a first-class ticket instead of flying business class.
Seated in business class, in seat 8D, Mohamed Atta, a clean-shaven thirty-three-year-old Egyptian in casual clothes, did not bother lowering his food tray.
He went to the washroom, rinsed off his face, breathed furiously, and then instinctively hightailed the rental car to LAX, catching the next flight up the coast, paying for full-fare Business Class, desperate to be aloft, the wheels no longer on the ground.
When the Boeing 747 lifted off at 1800, Newman was seated on the aisle in business class, not as a Marine officer, but as Peter J.
They were both travelling in the 747's upper deck, reserved for business class non-smokers, and Sisodia had moved into the em-pty seat next to Chamcha like air filling a vacuum.
Instead of surrendering himself to the fortune of the street and the charity of strangers, he flew business class to JFK, checked briefly into the Lowell, called a real estate broker, and speedily lucked out, finding himself this commodious West Side sublet.
Among the four hundred and fifty passengers, six men - who'd sat separately in business class - were careful to leave the jet at intervals, and with equal care took different taxis into New York.