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crewmember

n. A member of a crew.

Usage examples of "crewmember".

East African coast, the ship would pull into ports and a crewmember, in civilian clothes, would hand-carry the pouches of intercepts to the nearest American embassy.

The orcas were so fast that the hapless crewmembers barely had time to take aim with their weapons.

In addition, the five ferries that carried passengers between L1 and Skyport were named for the individual crewmembers.

Usually Starsa got all her inside information from Jayme, who would surely know the identity of the crewmember who had died on board the Enterprise.

Two of our crewmembers, acting under the creatures’ influence, gave them access to our sensor information and shield calibrations, and the specifications for replicating the necessary components for themselves.

Saint-Michael had gotten the green light, and for the past several days the space station's crewmembers, had worked overtime gathering information and staying on alert for a Soviet response.

The command module was crowded with all of Silver Tower's crewmembers, including the two civilian scientists and Will and Sontag of the space shuttle Enterprise, now docked on one of the space station's shuttle-docking bays on a resupply mission.

Several more loud bangs and a major fuel-cell explosion had occurred by the time Walker reported that all remaining crewmembers of the crippled space station were sealed aboard the lifeboat.

Ever since the command-module crewmembers had evacuated the station, Saint-Michael had been wearing the bottoms of his spacesuit.

A few words passed between the crewmembers, but they were hushed and confined strictly to the flight or the launch.

The four crewmembers pulled anti-"g" suits over their coveralls, which would protect them against the sustained five to six "g"s they might experience in the first ten minutes of flight.

The crew of the spaceplane America had little time to retrieve the bodies of their dead crewmembers, let alone boost the station into higher orbit.

The effect was to move the station and its tethered crewmembers upward toward outer space at a rate of ten miles per hour.

Bundles of wiring of all descriptions crisscrossed the module in all directions: it was easier for the crewmembers to float around the wires than to try to route the wiring behind the ever-changing landscape of electronic components.

Her hèsotsan was ready, but she lowered it when one of the crewmembers appeared.