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Dictionary
the wingman
noun
A pilot partner of another, a pilot who flies in the same wing or squadron.
Exact(40)
The author of "Always Hit on the Wingman" is now known at Glamour as "Book Jake".
The wingman touched down and Sinfield converted from the touchline to make it 12-6.
The Navy informed Congress that the wingman of the crashed E/A-6B Prowler reported that no parachutes were deployed.
"I mean, I was the wingman, O.K.?" But, he acknowledged, things are different now: "John's got a primary.
"I tried to duplicate what Herbie was doing at faceoffs and making passes onto the blade, not behind the wingman".
Rice has been the wingman to a couple of Hall of Famers, Chris McCarron and Mike Smith.
Similar(20)
Any change in relative position between aircraft is considered movement by the wingmen.
Around midnight, the Wingmen pulled up at another ferry landing, and Dannen stepped out to relieve himself behind a jetty.
He issued the Wingmen a citation — a substantial blow to the evening's profits, which, on a weeknight, rarely exceed two hundred dollars.
The Wingmen, in addition to Falcetano, include Norm Dannen (Fordham), Colin Keany (Brookdale Community College), and Zach McCue (Penn State), who all grew up on the same block in nearby Rumson.
A few minutes later, after the drop-off, Springsteen's "Hungry Heart" came on the radio, and the Wingmen, together again in Dannen's mom's Caravan, began to sing.
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