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WINDECKER YE-5

  • Windecker YE-5
  • Experimental US stealth aircraft, 1973–1985

    The Windecker YE-5A was an experimental aircraft evaluated by the U.S. Air Force. It was an all-composite construction aircraft, based on the commercial

    Windecker YE-5

    Windecker_YE-5

  • Windecker Eagle
  • American light aircraft

    The Eagle AC-7 Eagle 1 (USAF designation YE-5) is an aircraft that was manufactured by Windecker Industries. It was the first composite airplane (foam

    Windecker Eagle

    Windecker_Eagle

  • Stealth aircraft
  • Aircraft which use stealth technology to avoid detection

    (28 mi) range and more; Identification of those targets at 8-to-10-kilometre (5.0 to 6.2 mi) range; and Estimates of aerial target range at up to 15 kilometres

    Stealth aircraft

    Stealth aircraft

    Stealth_aircraft

  • List of United States electronic warfare aircraft
  • History and Heritage Command - National Naval Aviation Museum. Retrieved 5 April 2024. "EA-6B Prowler | Pacific Coast Air Museum | Navy Electronic".

    List of United States electronic warfare aircraft

    List of United States electronic warfare aircraft

    List_of_United_States_electronic_warfare_aircraft

  • List of aircraft (W)
  • Baby Cyclone Wilson Li'l Rebel Wilson Sky Mouse (Windecker Industries Inc.) Windecker Eagle Windecker YE-5 (Bologna, Italy) Winds Italia Airwalker Winds

    List of aircraft (W)

    List_of_aircraft_(W)

  • List of accidents and incidents involving military aircraft (1980–1989)
  • flight controls seized up. Both Pilots ejected and survived. 1985 Sole Windecker YE-5A Eagle, 73-1653, c/n 009, crashes during classified military test by

    List of accidents and incidents involving military aircraft (1980–1989)

    List_of_accidents_and_incidents_involving_military_aircraft_(1980–1989)

  • Heart
  • Organ found in humans and other animals

    original on 28 August 2021. Retrieved 11 September 2018. Kolh, Philippe; Windecker, Stephan; Alfonso, Fernando; Collet, Jean-Philippe; Cremer, Jochen; Falk

    Heart

    Heart

    Heart

  • History of Eglin Air Force Base
  • was flown at the Eglin AFB water test area on 13 July 1972. The sole Windecker YE-5A low-visibility airframe, 73-1653, c/n 005, delivered to the Air Force

    History of Eglin Air Force Base

    History_of_Eglin_Air_Force_Base

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WINDECKER YE-5

  • Mark
  • Surname or Lastname

    English and Dutch

    Mark

    English and Dutch : from Latin Marcus, the personal name of St. Mark the Evangelist, author of the second Gospel. The name was borne also by a number of other early Christian saints. Marcus was an old Roman name, of uncertain (possibly non-Italic) etymology; it may have some connection with the name of the war god Mars. Compare Martin. The personal name was not as popular in England in the Middle Ages as it was on the Continent, especially in Italy, where the evangelist became the patron of Venice and the Venetian Republic, and was allegedly buried at Aquileia. As an American family name, this has absorbed cognate and similar names from other European languages, including Greek Markos and Slavic Marek.English, German, and Dutch (van der Mark) : topographic name for someone who lived on a boundary between two districts, from Middle English merke, Middle High German marc, Middle Dutch marke, merke, all meaning ‘borderland’. The German term also denotes an area of fenced-off land (see Marker 5) and, like the English word, is embodied in various place names which have given rise to habitational names.English (of Norman origin) : habitational name from Marck, Pas-de-Calais.German : from Marko, a short form of any of the Germanic compound personal names formed with mark ‘borderland’ as the first element, for example Markwardt.Americanization or shortened form of any of several like-sounding Jewish or Slavic surnames (see for example Markow, Markowitz, Markovich).Irish (northeastern Ulster) : probably a short form of Markey (when not of English origin).

    Mark

  • Gregory
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Gregory

    English : from a personal name that was popular throughout Christendom in the Middle Ages. The Greek original, Grēgorios, is a derivative of grēgorein ‘to be awake’, ‘to be watchful’. However, the Latin form, Gregorius, came to be associated by folk etymology with grex, gregis, ‘flock’, ‘herd’, under the influence of the Christian image of the good shepherd. The Greek name was borne in the early Christian centuries by two fathers of the Orthodox Church, St. Gregory Nazianzene (c. 325–390) and St. Gregory of Nyssa (c. 331–395), and later by sixteen popes, starting with Gregory the Great (c. 540–604). It was also the name of 3rd- and 4th-century apostles of Armenia. In North America the English form of the name has absorbed many cognates from other European languages. (For forms, see Hanks and Hodges 1988).

    Gregory

  • Kaye
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Kaye

    English : variant spelling of Kay 4 and 5.

    Kaye

  • Nye
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (southeastern)

    Nye

    English (southeastern) : topographic name arising from a misdivision of Middle English atten (e)ye which means either ‘at the river’ or ‘at the island’, from Old English ēa ‘river’ and ēg ‘island’ respectively. Both these words were feminine in Old English, and so should have been preceded only by Middle English atter (see Rye), but distinctions of gender ceased to be carefully maintained in the Middle English period.

    Nye

  • Hoster
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hoster

    English : occupational name for a maker or seller of hoods, from Middle English hodestre, a feminine form of Hodder.German (also Höster) : habitational name for someone from either of two places called Host (see Host 5).

    Hoster

  • Prashast
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Prashast

    Learned one who shows the way, path Prashast kee-jee-ye , Congenial

    Prashast

  • Hillary
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hillary

    English : from a medieval male personal name (from Latin Hilarius, a derivative of hilaris ‘cheerful’, ‘glad’, from Greek hilaros ‘propitious’, ‘joyful’). The Latin name was chosen by many early Christians to express their joy and hope of salvation, and was borne by several saints, including a 4th-century bishop of Poitiers noted for his vigorous resistance to the Arian heresy, and a 5th-century bishop of Arles. Largely due to veneration of the first of these, the name became popular in France in the forms Hilari and Hilaire, and was brought to England by the Norman conquerors.English : from the much rarer female personal name Eulalie (from Latin Eulalia, from Greek eulalos ‘eloquent’, literally well-speaking, chosen by early Christians as a reference to the gift of tongues), likewise introduced into England by the Normans. A St. Eulalia was crucified at Barcelona in the reign of the Emperor Diocletian and became the patron of that city. In England the name underwent dissimilation of the sequence -l-l- to -l-r- and the unfamiliar initial vowel was also mutilated, so that eventually the name was considered as no more than a feminine form of Hilary (of which the initial aspirate was in any case variable).

    Hillary

  • Rook
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Rook

    English : nickname from the bird (Old English hrōc), most likely given to a person with very dark hair or a dark complexion or to someone with a raucous voice.English : some early examples, such as Robert of ye Rook (London 1318) and Henry del Rook (Staffordshire 1332), point clearly to a local name of some kind. The first of these could be from a house sign, the second may be a variant of Rock 1.German : from a short form of a Germanic personal name formed with hrok, of uncertain origin; perhaps a cognate of 1 or from Middle High German rōhen ‘to cry or yell (in battle)’ or Old High German ruoh ‘intent’.Perhaps an altered spelling of German Ruck.

    Rook

  • Yep
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Yep

    English : variant of Yap.Chinese : see Ye.

    Yep

  • Kayes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Kayes

    English : patronymic from Kay 5.

    Kayes

  • Rye
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Rye

    English : topographic name for someone who lived on an island or patch of firm ground surrounded by fens, from a misdivision of the Middle English phrase atter ye ‘at the island’ (from Old English ēg, īeg ‘island’).English : topographic name for someone who lived near a river or stream, from a misdivision of the Middle English phrase atter eye ‘at the river’ (from Old English ēa ‘river’).English : topographic name for someone living at a place where rye (Old English ryge) was grown, or perhaps a metonymic occupational name for someone who grew or sold it.Norwegian : habitational name from a farmstead so named, most of them from Old Norse rjóðr ‘clearing in a forest’, but others from ry ‘dry place with stones’.Danish : habitational name from a place called Rye.

    Rye

  • Prashasth | ப்ரஷாஸ்த
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Prashasth | ப்ரஷாஸ்த

    Learned one who shows the way, path Prashast kee-jee-ye , Congenial

    Prashasth | ப்ரஷாஸ்த

  • Prashast | ப்ரஷஸ்த
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Prashast | ப்ரஷஸ்த

    Learned one who shows the way, path Prashast kee-jee-ye , Congenial

    Prashast | ப்ரஷஸ்த

  • Joseph
  • Surname or Lastname

    English, German, French, and Jewish

    Joseph

    English, German, French, and Jewish : from the personal name, Hebrew Yosef ‘may He (God) add (another son)’. In medieval Europe this name was borne frequently but not exclusively by Jews; the usual medieval English vernacular form is represented by Jessup. In the Book of Genesis, Joseph is the favorite son of Jacob, who is sold into slavery by his brothers but rises to become a leading minister in Egypt (Genesis 37–50). In the New Testament Joseph is the husband of the Virgin Mary, which accounts for the popularity of the given name among Christians.A bearer of the name Joseph with the secondary surname Langoumois (and therefore presumably from the Angoumois region of France) is documented in Quebec City in 1718.

    Joseph

  • YESIYMAEL
  • Male

    Hebrew

    YESIYMAEL

    (ישִׂימִאֵל) Hebrew name YESIYMAEL means "whom God makes" according to Gesenius. But hasn't he omitted the first element (Ye-)? It looks to actually be composed of 'el "god" and suwm "to create, to make" or "to place, to set" and yĕ "to age, to grow old," from yashen "to blanch, to fester, to grow weary;" hence "whom God makes grow old," especially from a festering sickness called leprosy (Hebrew tsara'ath "leprosy" from tsara "struck down, smitten" by God). Gesenius states that "leprosy" (צָרַע) may be the same as (גָרַע) "scabby," so that it means to be struck by a scabby disease. In the bible, this is the name of a Simeonite chief of the family of Shimei. Jesimiel is the Anglicized form.

    YESIYMAEL

  • Hoye
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Hoye

    English : variant spelling of Hoy 1.Norwegian : habitational name from any of several farmsteads named Høye, from the dative singular of Old Norse haugr ‘hill’, ‘mound’.

    Hoye

  • Lye
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Lye

    English : topographic name for someone who lived near a meadow, pasture, or patch of arable land, Middle English l(e)ye (late Old English lēage, dative of lēah ‘wood’, ‘glade’); or a habitational name from Lye in Herefordshire (with the same etymology).French : habitational name from Lye in Indre.French (Lyé) : habitational name from places called Lié in Deux-Sèvres and Vendée.Norwegian : habitational name from a farmstead in Rogaland named Lye, Old Norse Lýgi meaning ‘alliance’, ‘covenant’, used to denote a place sanctified by such an agreement, such as a court or council meeting place.

    Lye

  • Litchford
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Litchford

    English : habitational name, possibly a variant of Litchfield. The surname is not found in current English records, but of the 52 bearers recorded in the 1881 British Census, 28 were born in Kent, suggesting that a different, unidentified source could be involved.

    Litchford

  • Prashasth
  • Boy/Male

    Hindu

    Prashasth

    Learned one who shows the way, path Prashast kee-jee-ye , Congenial

    Prashasth

  • Haynes
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Shropshire)

    Haynes

    English (Shropshire) : from the Welsh personal name Einws, a diminutive of Einion (of uncertain origin, popularly associated with einion ‘anvil’).English : patronymic from the medieval personal name Hain 2.English : habitational name from Haynes in Bedfordshire. This name first appears in Domesday Book as Hagenes, which Mills derives from the plural of Old English hægen, hagen ‘enclosure’.Irish : variant of Hines.John Haynes (?1594–1653) had emigrated from Essex, England, where his father was lord of the manor of Copford Hall near Colchester, to MA, where he was governor in 1635. He moved to CT, and was the colony's first governor (1639–53/54).

    Haynes

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Online names & meanings

  • Holms
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Holms

    English : variant of Holm.

  • Ieshah
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Swahili

    Ieshah

    Woman; Life

  • Ratheesh
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Malayalam

    Ratheesh

    Husband of Rati Devi

  • Vishvesh | விஷ்வேஷ
  • Boy/Male

    Tamil

    Vishvesh | விஷ்வேஷ

    Lord of the world

  • Khog |
  • Boy/Male

    Muslim

    Khog |

    Sweet, Cute

  • Eulalia
  • Girl/Female

    Greek American

    Eulalia

    Sweetly speaking, sweet-spoken. Famous bearer; 4th century Spanish martyr St Eulalia.

  • Leopolda
  • Girl/Female

    German

    Leopolda

    Of the people.

  • Shaveh
  • Biblical

    Shaveh

    the plain; that makes equality

  • Inderpreet
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Inderpreet

    Love for God

  • Thetford
  • Surname or Lastname

    English (Norfolk)

    Thetford

    English (Norfolk) : habitational name from a place in Norfolk, named in Old English with þeodo- ‘people’ + ford ‘ford’.

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WINDECKER YE-5

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  • Vanity
  • n.

    One of the established characters in the old moralities and puppet shows. See Morality, n., 5.

  • You
  • dat. & obj.

    The pronoun of the second person, in the nominative, dative, and objective case, indicating the person or persons addressed. See the Note under Ye.

  • Ye
  • n.

    An eye.

  • Ye
  • pron.

    The plural of the pronoun of the second person in the nominative case.

  • Virgin
  • v. i.

    To act the virgin; to be or keep chaste; -- followed by it. See It, 5.

  • As
  • adv. & conj.

    Denoting equality or likeness in kind, degree, or manner; like; similar to; in the same manner with or in which; in accordance with; in proportion to; to the extent or degree in which or to which; equally; no less than; as, ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil; you will reap as you sow; do as you are bidden.

  • Alleluiah
  • n.

    An exclamation signifying Praise ye Jehovah. Hence: A song of praise to God. See Hallelujah, the commoner form.

  • Ye
  • adv.

    Yea; yes.

  • Vowel
  • n.

    A vocal, or sometimes a whispered, sound modified by resonance in the oral passage, the peculiar resonance in each case giving to each several vowel its distinctive character or quality as a sound of speech; -- distinguished from a consonant in that the latter, whether made with or without vocality, derives its character in every case from some kind of obstructive action by the mouth organs. Also, a letter or character which represents such a sound. See Guide to Pronunciation, // 5, 146-149.

  • To
  • prep.

    As sign of the infinitive, to had originally the use of last defined, governing the infinitive as a verbal noun, and connecting it as indirect object with a preceding verb or adjective; thus, ready to go, i.e., ready unto going; good to eat, i.e., good for eating; I do my utmost to lead my life pleasantly. But it has come to be the almost constant prefix to the infinitive, even in situations where it has no prepositional meaning, as where the infinitive is direct object or subject; thus, I love to learn, i.e., I love learning; to die for one's country is noble, i.e., the dying for one's country. Where the infinitive denotes the design or purpose, good usage formerly allowed the prefixing of for to the to; as, what went ye out for see? (Matt. xi. 8).

  • Vanadium
  • n.

    A rare element of the nitrogen-phosphorus group, found combined, in vanadates, in certain minerals, and reduced as an infusible, grayish-white metallic powder. It is intermediate between the metals and the non-metals, having both basic and acid properties. Symbol V (or Vd, rarely). Atomic weight 51.2.

  • Vapored
  • a.

    Affected with the vapors. See Vapor, n., 5.

  • Vandal
  • n.

    One of a Teutonic race, formerly dwelling on the south shore of the Baltic, the most barbarous and fierce of the northern nations that plundered Rome in the 5th century, notorious for destroying the monuments of art and literature.

  • Hallelujah
  • n. & interj.

    Praise ye Jehovah; praise ye the Lord; -- an exclamation used chiefly in songs of praise or thanksgiving to God, and as an expression of gratitude or adoration.

  • Pronoun
  • n.

    A word used instead of a noun or name, to avoid the repetition of it. The personal pronouns in English are I, thou or you, he, she, it, we, ye, and they.

  • Farewell
  • interj.

    Go well; good-by; adieu; -- originally applied to a person departing, but by custom now applied both to those who depart and those who remain. It is often separated by the pronoun; as, fare you well; and is sometimes used as an expression of separation only; as, farewell the year; farewell, ye sweet groves; that is, I bid you farewell.

  • Yen
  • pl.

    of Ye