v-1 in English

noun
1
a small flying bomb powered by a simple jet engine, used by the Germans in World War II.
When Churchill first learned about the V-1 he was so alarmed that he advocated using poison gas against Germany.

Use "v-1" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "v-1" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "v-1", or refer to the context using the word "v-1" in the English Dictionary.

1. V 1 errata - not used.

2. Baste (v.1) "sew together loosely," c

3. Besplatter (v) [1] to soil by splattering; splash with water, dirt, etc

4. At least one periodically oscillating current and/or voltage source (v¿1?

5. Endbell Armatures - Viper V-1, BSRT, Tomy Super G Pluse, Life Like M

6. RLR || variable || Variable speed engine for propulsion of railcars || RLR-v-1 || C1

7. Bumbaste (v.) (1) To beat on the posteriors; hence, to flog, beat soundly, thrash

8. Bumbaste (v.) (1) To beat on the posteriors; hence, to flog, beat soundly, thrash

9. Cloven (adj.) "divided, split," Old English clofen, past-participle adjective from cleave (v.1)

10. Attiring body fit (v.1) เนื้อผ้าประกอบจาก เส้นใย polyester 92% spandex 8% มีคุณสมบัติเบาสบาย ระบายเหงื่อได้ดี แห้งไว ไม่เกิดกลิ่นอับชื้น ดีไซน์เน้นการ

11. Nimrod (hebrejsky נִמְרוֹד nebo נִמְרֹד ‎‎) je Biblická postava, která je zmíněna jak v 1

12. Volume from Stock Solution (V 1) is the volume to be removed (i.e., Aliquoted) from the concentrated stock solution

13. Complete Bipartite Graph: A graph G = (V, E) is called a complete Bipartite graph if its vertices V can be partitioned into two subsets V 1 and V 2 such that each vertex of V 1 is connected to each vertex of V 2

14. Bipartite Graph - If the vertex-set of a graph G can be split into two disjoint sets, V 1 and V 2, in such a way that each edge in the graph joins a vertex in V 1 to a vertex in V 2, and there are no edges in G that connect two vertices in V 1 or two vertices in V 2, then the graph G is called a Bipartite graph.

15. We also had to cope with air raids and German V-1 missiles that flew quite low over Kent to bomb London.

16. Awfulize v: 1: to make a situation out to be worse than it really is 2 : to complain characterizing a mundane issue…

17. The cargo manifest of the Japanese submarine I-29 lists a single V-1 fuselage as being included in a shipment of equipment.

18. The Copula is therefore applicable in the sense that correlation structure is defined indirectly rather than directly between \({ V }_{ 1 }\) and \({ V }_{ 2 }\)

19. [Y] parameters are known asshort circuit Admittance parameters because in both the cases, one-port is short (i.e., V 1 = 0 and V 2 = 0)

20. Meaning of Batfowl 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Batfowl v 1: catch birds by temporarily blinding them WordNet ® Princeton University.

21. The V-weapon offensive ended in March 1945, with the last V-2 landing in Kent on March 27 and the last V-1 two days later.

22. A1225(c1200) Vices & V.(1) (Stw 34) 13/24: Mani oðer..hafde misdon and non unʒelimp ne cam ac hadde alle Blisse and reste inowh

23. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Beseem v 1: accord or comport with; "This kind of behavior does not suit a young woman!"

24. Meaning of Bedew 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Bedew v 1: cover with drops of dew or as with dew WordNet ® Princeton University.

25. Up to 5% cash back  · Gehouden te Bandoeng, op 19-21 augustus 1912 [en Malang, op 21-22 augustus 1914] Volume: v.1 (1914) (Reprint) (Softcover) Indonesia

26. Pulmonary function tests show an F.E.C. of over three liters, with F.E. V.-1 of at least 90% of predicted... and preserved F.E.D. / F.E.C. ratio and preserved D.L.C.O. as well.

27. Meaning of Assonate 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Assonate v 1: correspond in vowel sounds; rhyme in assonance; "The accented vowels Assonated in this poem"

28. A collechon ideal Battes and store connected shows the contre 9V + 1 11 22 12 Loop 1 8 V + 1 12 А 15 12 Loop 2 나 13 1+ 6 V a

29. Appay V(1), Fastenackels S, Katlama C, Ait-Mohand H, Schneider L, Guihot A, Keller M, Grubeck-Loebenstein B, Simon A, Lambotte O, Hunt PW, Deeks SG, Costagliola D, Autran B, Sauce D

30. Buck (v.1) of a horse, "make a violent back-arched leap in an effort to throw off a rider," 1848, apparently "jump like a Buck," from Buck (n.1)

31. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Bedim v 1: make darker and difficult to perceive by sight [syn: {benight}, {Bedim}] 2: make obscure or unclear; "The distinction was obscured" [syn: {obscure}, {Bedim}, {overcloud}]

32. Benthonic foraminifera are occurred continuously with common, abundant, rare and very rare which can be practically used to subdivide the successions into three Benthonic foraminiferal zone as following: V.1 Amphistegina vulgaris – Textularia gramen – Amphimorphina haueriana Zone Type: Assemblage zone

33. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Conventionalize v 1: make conventional or adapt to conventions; "Conventionalized behavior" [syn: {Conventionalize}, {conventionalise}] 2: represent according to a conventional style; "a stylized female head" [syn: {stylize}, {stylise}, {Conventionalize}]

34. Couth (adj.) Middle English Couth "known, well-known; usual, customary," from Old English cuðe "known," past participle of cunnan "to know," less commonly "to have power to, to be able" (see can (v.1)).

35. Belie (v.) Old English beleogan "to deceive by lies," from be- + lie (v.1) "to lie, tell lies." Current sense of "to contradict as a lie, give the lie to, show to be false" is first recorded 1640s.

36. Calumniate v 1: charge falsely or with malicious intent; attack the good name and reputation of someone; "The journalists have defamed me!" "The article in the paper sullied my reputation" [syn: defame, slander, smirch, asperse, denigrate, Calumniate, smear, sully, besmirch]

37. The formula for Acceleration expressed in terms of the initial velocity (speed), final velocity and the Acceleration duration (time) is: where a is the Acceleration, v 0 is the starting velocity, v 1 is the final velocity, and t is the time (Acceleration duration or t 1 - t 0).

38. Carol, broadly, a song, characteristically of religious joy, associated with a given season, especially Christmas; more strictly, a late medieval English song on any subject, in which uniform stanzas, or verses (V), alternate with a refrain, or burden (B), in the pattern B, V 1, B, V 2

39. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Cadge v 1: ask for and get free; be a parasite [syn: {mooch}, {bum}, {Cadge}, {grub}, {sponge}] 2: obtain or seek to obtain by cadging or wheedling; "he is always shnorring cigarettes from his friends" [syn: {schnorr}, {shnorr}, {scrounge}, {Cadge}]

40. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Curvet n 1: a light leap by a horse in which both hind legs leave the ground before the forelegs come down [syn: {Curvet}, {vaulting}] v 1: perform a leap where both hind legs come off the ground, of a horse

41. Adumbrate v 1: describe roughly or briefly or give the main points or summary of; "sketch the outline of the book"; "outline his ideas" [syn: sketch, outline, Adumbrate] 2: give to understand; "I insinuated that I did not like his wife" [syn: intimate, Adumbrate, insinuate]

42. 1 definition found From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]: Befog v 1: make less visible or unclear; "The stars are obscured by the clouds"; "the big elm tree obscures our view of the valley" [syn: {obscure}, {Befog}, {becloud}, {obnubilate}, {haze over}, {fog}, {cloud}, {mist}] WordNet ® Princeton University.

43. Antedate 1580s, "to date before the true time," earlier as noun meaning "a backdating, false early date attached to a document or event" (1570s); from Latin ante "before" (from PIE root *ant-"front, forehead," with derivatives meaning "in front of, before") + date (v.1)

44. Antedate (v.) 1580s, "to date before the true time," earlier as noun meaning "a backdating, false early date attached to a document or event" (1570s); from Latin ante "before" (from PIE root *ant-"front, forehead," with derivatives meaning "in front of, before") + date (v.1)

45. 'Srlv.-Us b-'MirtaOi-de -lodb*-- Bortard uo-teaisi41qlu*I1adaa't Swef~egwi dade lb oniieadMi*MtbijNl^ ., s h' seinur&IMEII toiouraegl(I ahs saeroosado8 Uwbsawiaop ologiosa qa ..or ito S 6&quo vaz des 0lo-fM~ digponha de tufb 0 sdo jal 6 reaimeNWOOM-dti guairdar w-dSI6%-o A V' 1 i' , dt ft.+ i, IaISm Si m

46. Chide v 1: censure severely or angrily; "The mother scolded the child for entering a stranger's car"; "The deputy ragged the Prime Minister"; "The customer dressed down the waiter for bringing cold soup" [syn: call on the carpet, take to task, rebuke, rag, trounce, reproof, lecture, reprimand, jaw, dress down, call down, scold, Chide, berate

47. 1600, from Medieval Latin Adjacentia, abstract noun from Latin adiacens "lying at," present participle of adiacere "lie at, border upon, lie near," from ad "to" (see ad-) + iacēre "to lie, rest," related to iacere "to throw; lay ('cast (oneself) down')," from PIE root *ye- "to throw, impel." Related entries & more jut (v.1)

48. Bounder (n.) 1560s, "one who sets bounds," agent noun from bound (v.1); British English slang meaning "person of objectionable social behavior, would-be stylish person," is from 1882, perhaps from bound (v.2) on notion of one trying to "bound" into high society, but earliest usage suggests one outside the "bounds" of acceptable socializing, which would connect it with bound (n.1).

49. Afore-seid ppl_abs 2 Aforeseyd 2 afor-yen prep 1 aforyeyn 1 afounden v2 1 affounde 1 afrighten v 1 afright 1 after adv 75 after 72 aftir 3 after conj 39 after 32 aftir 7 after-dinner n 2 after-dyner 2 after-mete n 1 after-mete 1 after prep 348 after 331 aftir 17 after-soper n 2 after-soper 2 after-ward adv 32 afterward 29 aftirward 3 agame adv