low-flying - meaning and definition. What is low-flying
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What (who) is low-flying - definition

CHRISTIAN DENOMINATIONS WITHOUT MUCH RITUAL OR EMPHASIS ON CHURCH AUTHORITY, AND NARROWLY EVANGELICAL IN THEIR TEACHING
Low Church; Low Churchman; Low Protestant; Low Anglican; Low churchman; Low-church; Low-Church

low-flying      
Low-flying aircraft or birds are flying very close to the ground, or lower than normal.
ADJ: ADJ n
Flying saucer         
  • date = March 2012}}</ref>
  • October 1957 issue of ''[[Amazing Stories]]'' magazine devoted to flying saucers. The sightings starting in 1947 ignited an obsession with flying saucers that lasted a decade.
  • Avrocar]], a one-person flying saucer-style aircraft
  • Fata Morgana]] of distant islands distorted images beyond recognition
  • ''News notice'' printed in [[Nuremberg]], describing 4 April 1561 Nuremberg mass sighting. Discs and spheres were said to emerge from large cylinders. From [[Wickiana]] collection in [[Zürich]].
  • A lenticular cloud
  • A small flying saucer leaves its larger mothership in ''[[Plan 9 from Outer Space]]'' (1957).
  • One of the first depictions of a "flying saucer", by illustrator [[Frank R. Paul]] on the October 1929 issue of [[Hugo Gernsback]]'s pulp [[science fiction]] magazine ''[[Science Wonder Stories]]''. Although the term wasn't used before 1947, fantasy artwork in [[pulp magazine]]s prepared the American mind to be receptive to the idea of "flying saucers".
  • Exhibition model of a flying saucer (2022)
  • Magnification of second McMinnville UFO photograph.
TYPE OF SUPPOSED ALIEN SPACECRAFT, OR UFO
Flying saucers; Flying Saucers; Alien spacecraft; Extraterrestrial spacecraft; Flying-saucer; User:Smurrayinchester/Flying; Flying disk (UFO); Flying Disk (UFOs); 🛸; Alien spaceship
A flying saucer (also referred to as "a flying disc") is a descriptive term for a type of flying craft having a disc or saucer-shaped body, commonly used generically to refer to an anomalous flying object. The term was coined in 1947 but has generally been supplanted since 1952 by the United States Air Force term unidentified flying objects (or UFOs for short).
flying saucer         
  • date = March 2012}}</ref>
  • October 1957 issue of ''[[Amazing Stories]]'' magazine devoted to flying saucers. The sightings starting in 1947 ignited an obsession with flying saucers that lasted a decade.
  • Avrocar]], a one-person flying saucer-style aircraft
  • Fata Morgana]] of distant islands distorted images beyond recognition
  • ''News notice'' printed in [[Nuremberg]], describing 4 April 1561 Nuremberg mass sighting. Discs and spheres were said to emerge from large cylinders. From [[Wickiana]] collection in [[Zürich]].
  • A lenticular cloud
  • A small flying saucer leaves its larger mothership in ''[[Plan 9 from Outer Space]]'' (1957).
  • One of the first depictions of a "flying saucer", by illustrator [[Frank R. Paul]] on the October 1929 issue of [[Hugo Gernsback]]'s pulp [[science fiction]] magazine ''[[Science Wonder Stories]]''. Although the term wasn't used before 1947, fantasy artwork in [[pulp magazine]]s prepared the American mind to be receptive to the idea of "flying saucers".
  • Exhibition model of a flying saucer (2022)
  • Magnification of second McMinnville UFO photograph.
TYPE OF SUPPOSED ALIEN SPACECRAFT, OR UFO
Flying saucers; Flying Saucers; Alien spacecraft; Extraterrestrial spacecraft; Flying-saucer; User:Smurrayinchester/Flying; Flying disk (UFO); Flying Disk (UFOs); 🛸; Alien spaceship
(flying saucers)
A flying saucer is a round, flat object which some people say they have seen in the sky and which they believe to be a spacecraft from another planet. (OLD-FASHIONED)
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Low church

In Anglican Christianity, low church refers to those who give little emphasis to ritual. The term is most often used in a liturgical sense, denoting a Protestant emphasis, whereas "high church" denotes an emphasis on ritual, often Anglo-Catholic.

The term was initially pejorative. During the series of doctrinal and ecclesiastic challenges to the established church in the 17th century, commentators and others—who favoured the theology, worship, and hierarchical structure of Anglicanism (such as the episcopate) as the true form of Christianity—began referring to that outlook (and the related practices) as "high church", and by the early 18th century those theologians and politicians who sought more reform in the English church and a greater liberalisation of church structure, were in contrast called "low church".

Examples of use of low-flying
1. Cruise missiles are usually low–flying guided missiles.
2. Residents don‘t like low–flying planes or remotely controlled weapons messing with their garage door openers.
3. He said the missiles were effective against low–flying US and Nato aircraft.
4. Cruise missiles are typically low–flying guided missiles that use jet propulsion.
5. A former mujahedeen commander, Daoud said the Taliban can down low–flying planes.