An airplane with one pair of wings is a monoplane.
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A monoplane has a single wing. A biplane has two, upper and lower.
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It was the mid 1930's before the all-metal monoplanebecame the accepted norm.
This is just one sentence with the word MONOPLANE!
I have only flown one monoplane, so far.
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The is only one pair of wings on a monoplane. There would be one wing on each side of the plane.
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It was built by Félix du Temple in 1874, and it was called the 'Du Temple Monoplane'.
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A monoplane has one pair of wings - usually one wing on each side of the fuselage.
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A monoplane has one pair of wings (2 wings). There is usually one wing on each side of each fuselage.
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An airplane with a single pair of wings is called a "monoplane." This is opposed to a "biplane" which has two pairs of wings or a "triplane" which has three. Since biplanes and triplanes have become so rare, the phrase "monoplane" has fallen into disuse as the monoplane configuration is regarded as being the standard.
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The US organized their early air force as a part of the US Army. Their aircraft was identified as by the type and model number. One type of airplane was a Pursuit plane and they were identified by "P" such as the P-40.
A monoplane is an airplane with a single wing as compared to a Biplane. The very first fighters were biplanes in WW1 and soon after that. So the first single wing figher planes could be referred to as "pursuit monoplane". One of the first US monoplane fighters was the P-26 Pea Shooter.
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That is a monoplane. The one in the picture above is a biplane.
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Lindbergh's Ryan Monoplane was named "Spirit of St. Louis"
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FarmVille has released the Chrome Monoplane that we showed you a LONG time ago into the market for iPhone, iPad, iPod and iTouch. You can find it in your Mobile Market for a mere 30,000 coins and will reward 300 XP!
Which in no way has answered the original question. lol.
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The Spirit of St. Louis was the Ryan Monoplane Charles Lindbergh flew to Paris.
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Shirley Snow Miller has written:
'Wind tunnel tests on a low-wing monoplane with propeller running' -- subject(s): Aeronautics
'Wind tunnel tests on a low-wing monoplane with propeller running' -- subject(s): Aeronautics
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The word 'monoplane' is a noun; a word for an aircraft with a fixed-wing configuration and only one wing (as opposed to biplanes and triplanes); a word for a thing.
A noun is used as the subject of a sentence or a clause, and as the object of a verb or a preposition.
Example sentence: "All of today's most common and recognizable aircraft are monoplanes."
(direct object of the linking verb 'are', a subject complement)
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No, the Spirit of St Louis was a custom built, single engine, single seat monoplane.
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Aircraft with one set of wings i.e 737-800
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The most common type is the single engine monoplane, possibly the Cessna 172 series.
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The same thing that makes a monoplane fly (i.e. lift), except a biplane has twice as many wings to do it with.
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A Monoplane is a airplane with one main wing. This has been the dominate design for planes since the 1930's.
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a monoplane is a airplnes with 1 wing. a biplane is a aircraft with 2 wings
a triplane is a airplane with 3 wings.
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Charles Lindbergh flew his Ryan monoplane 'Spirit of St Louis', across the Atlantic in May 1927.
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The Spitfire origin was fast racing seaplanes. Reginald Mitchell's designs later became one of the first fast monoplane fighters.
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Gabriel Shire Levy has written:
'Autorotating characteristics of a low-wing monoplane' -- subject(s): Physics Theses
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The first successful French airplane, a tractor monoplane named the "Blériot VII," was introduced in 1907 by Louis Blériot.
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American aviatrix Harriet Quimby was the first woman to fly the Channel solo. She did this in a Bleriot monoplane in April 1912.
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