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Is there a name of the flying bionic bird?


In the format of A.B. Name, which is the given name and which is the family name?Objects with no name, like “the Sun”When is there a “the” at the beginning of a university's name?Is there an English word for a person who shares your name?Human name based on the root “Fury”Is there a single word for when two people have the same name?skill name in gamesIs there a name for the relationship between a movement and a follower of that movement?A noun followed by namePreferred name versus legal name






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








19















I have seen this flying robotic bird on youtube few days ago. Unlike other flying machines/robots, it flaps its wing to fly.



enter image description here



Doing google, I came to know that they are called bionic bird. But, bionic bird may not necessarily fly. They can be used as a spying robots sitting on a wall.



What do you call a robot or a machine flying like a bird?










share|improve this question




























    19















    I have seen this flying robotic bird on youtube few days ago. Unlike other flying machines/robots, it flaps its wing to fly.



    enter image description here



    Doing google, I came to know that they are called bionic bird. But, bionic bird may not necessarily fly. They can be used as a spying robots sitting on a wall.



    What do you call a robot or a machine flying like a bird?










    share|improve this question
























      19












      19








      19


      4






      I have seen this flying robotic bird on youtube few days ago. Unlike other flying machines/robots, it flaps its wing to fly.



      enter image description here



      Doing google, I came to know that they are called bionic bird. But, bionic bird may not necessarily fly. They can be used as a spying robots sitting on a wall.



      What do you call a robot or a machine flying like a bird?










      share|improve this question














      I have seen this flying robotic bird on youtube few days ago. Unlike other flying machines/robots, it flaps its wing to fly.



      enter image description here



      Doing google, I came to know that they are called bionic bird. But, bionic bird may not necessarily fly. They can be used as a spying robots sitting on a wall.



      What do you call a robot or a machine flying like a bird?







      single-word-requests nouns names






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Apr 9 at 0:27









      Josh BJosh B

      1086




      1086




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

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          43














          The name of this device dates back to the year 1908. It comes from French ornithoptère meaning a machine designed to fly be mechanical flapping of wings.



          Here, Greek ornitho- meaning brid + Greek -pteron meaning "wing".



          So, we have the word ornithopter.




          A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




          "In collaboration with SRI International in Menlo Park, California, they are developing ornithopters - aircraft that get all of their thrust and most of their lift from flapping wings."








          share|improve this answer




















          • 5





            Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

            – Pureferret
            Apr 9 at 9:45


















          5














          When I was a wee tyke, we called this an "ornithopter". Back then it was powered by a wound-up rubber band.



          Today?




          ornithopter NOUN historical

          A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




          Oxford Dictionaries






          share|improve this answer























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            2 Answers
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            active

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            active

            oldest

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            43














            The name of this device dates back to the year 1908. It comes from French ornithoptère meaning a machine designed to fly be mechanical flapping of wings.



            Here, Greek ornitho- meaning brid + Greek -pteron meaning "wing".



            So, we have the word ornithopter.




            A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




            "In collaboration with SRI International in Menlo Park, California, they are developing ornithopters - aircraft that get all of their thrust and most of their lift from flapping wings."








            share|improve this answer




















            • 5





              Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

              – Pureferret
              Apr 9 at 9:45















            43














            The name of this device dates back to the year 1908. It comes from French ornithoptère meaning a machine designed to fly be mechanical flapping of wings.



            Here, Greek ornitho- meaning brid + Greek -pteron meaning "wing".



            So, we have the word ornithopter.




            A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




            "In collaboration with SRI International in Menlo Park, California, they are developing ornithopters - aircraft that get all of their thrust and most of their lift from flapping wings."








            share|improve this answer




















            • 5





              Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

              – Pureferret
              Apr 9 at 9:45













            43












            43








            43







            The name of this device dates back to the year 1908. It comes from French ornithoptère meaning a machine designed to fly be mechanical flapping of wings.



            Here, Greek ornitho- meaning brid + Greek -pteron meaning "wing".



            So, we have the word ornithopter.




            A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




            "In collaboration with SRI International in Menlo Park, California, they are developing ornithopters - aircraft that get all of their thrust and most of their lift from flapping wings."








            share|improve this answer















            The name of this device dates back to the year 1908. It comes from French ornithoptère meaning a machine designed to fly be mechanical flapping of wings.



            Here, Greek ornitho- meaning brid + Greek -pteron meaning "wing".



            So, we have the word ornithopter.




            A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




            "In collaboration with SRI International in Menlo Park, California, they are developing ornithopters - aircraft that get all of their thrust and most of their lift from flapping wings."









            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Apr 10 at 10:03

























            answered Apr 9 at 0:31









            Ubi hattUbi hatt

            5,3301737




            5,3301737







            • 5





              Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

              – Pureferret
              Apr 9 at 9:45












            • 5





              Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

              – Pureferret
              Apr 9 at 9:45







            5




            5





            Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

            – Pureferret
            Apr 9 at 9:45





            Regardless of the century, plane, or species, developing artificers never fail to invent the ornithopter.

            – Pureferret
            Apr 9 at 9:45













            5














            When I was a wee tyke, we called this an "ornithopter". Back then it was powered by a wound-up rubber band.



            Today?




            ornithopter NOUN historical

            A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




            Oxford Dictionaries






            share|improve this answer



























              5














              When I was a wee tyke, we called this an "ornithopter". Back then it was powered by a wound-up rubber band.



              Today?




              ornithopter NOUN historical

              A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




              Oxford Dictionaries






              share|improve this answer

























                5












                5








                5







                When I was a wee tyke, we called this an "ornithopter". Back then it was powered by a wound-up rubber band.



                Today?




                ornithopter NOUN historical

                A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




                Oxford Dictionaries






                share|improve this answer













                When I was a wee tyke, we called this an "ornithopter". Back then it was powered by a wound-up rubber band.



                Today?




                ornithopter NOUN historical

                A machine designed to achieve flight by means of flapping wings.




                Oxford Dictionaries







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Apr 9 at 0:30









                GEdgarGEdgar

                14k22045




                14k22045



























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