Find the word definition

Crossword clues for top-flight

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
top-flight
adjective
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
top-flight attorneys
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ But even the most cynical agree that good fortune is the mark of every top-flight politician.
▪ Dave Libbey, another top-flight ref, has been conspicuously absent since his return from an early season injury.
▪ His office says he has kept at least 20 top-flight journalists and analysts cooling their heels waiting to interview him since October.
▪ Kile is among a handful of top-flight pitchers headed toward free agency.
▪ Liz sees the profit in investing two days' selection time to hire a top-flight sales person.
Wiktionary
top-flight

a. 1 Of the highest rank, or peak of excellence 2 In the highest division

WordNet
top-flight

adj. excellent; best possible [syn: top-hole, topping]

Usage examples of "top-flight".

And the sign of your top-flight carnie was the way I scored those toppings.

They were assault specialists and top-flight snipers whose training regimen included what Fagin referred to as the Bayer drill, the ability to snipe an aspirin tablet at two hundred yards.

Lights blazed everywhere and Thinkers of all grades wafted through no-grav on various errands: low-levellers bringing complex problems to A-block, students hopefully searching for a top-flight Thinker with a moment to spare.

If I were a top-flight brain surgeon I'd say anything from half an hour to a year or two, because people who really know what they are talking about are only too aware that we know next to nothing about the brain.

With his pal Bud Barclay, Chow, and a group of top-flight technicians, he braves the white fury of the Antarctic ice barriers to set up operations.

But it was well enough known that there existed top-flight drivers who had crashed or who had suffered so much nervous and mental fatigue that they had become empty shells of their former selves, that there were among the current twenty-four Grand Prix drivers four or five who would never win a race again because they had no intention of ever trying to do so, who kept going only in order to shore up the facade of a now empty pride.

Martin’s Press that top-flight investigative reporters from the mainstream media—where nine out of ten reporters voted for Clinton—had unearthed no evidence of the purported cocaine bust.