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Discover LudwigThe phrase "an airborne" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is in the air or flying, often in contexts related to aviation or airborne diseases.
Example: "The military deployed an airborne unit to assist in the rescue operations."
Alternatives: "a flying" or "an aerial".
Exact(59)
("This is not an airborne disease").
Other guides focus on an airborne niche.
It's like an airborne Malory Towers.
What is a snowstorm but an airborne snowing event?
He's an all-purpose fighting vehicle — an airborne Robocop.
Others are being kept as an airborne reserve.
Inevitably, the press found an airborne stowaway to celebrate.
Physicians are not completely without backup in an airborne emergency.
Need an assistant commander of an airborne regiment?
"I think we have an airborne H5N1 virus".
Similar(1)
More important, the ComAlliance warehouse lies at the edge of an Airborne Express runway.
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