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fleet
1[fleet]
noun
the largest organized unit of naval ships grouped for tactical or other purposes.
the largest organization of warships under the command of a single officer.
a number of naval vessels or vessels carrying armed crew members.
a large group of ships, airplanes, trucks, etc., operated by a single company or under the same ownership.
He owns a fleet of cabs.
a large group of airplanes, automobiles, etc., moving or operating together.
fleet
2[fleet]
verb (used without object)
fleet
3[fleet]
noun
an arm of the sea; inlet.
a creek; stream; watercourse.
the Fleet, a former prison in London, long used for debtors.
fleet
1/ fliːt /
adjective
rapid in movement; swift
poetic, fleeting; transient
verb
(intr) to move rapidly
archaic, (intr) to fade away smoothly; glide
(tr) nautical
to change the position of (a hawser)
to pass (a messenger or lead) to a hawser from a winch for hauling in
to spread apart (the blocks of a tackle)
obsolete, (intr) to float or swim
obsolete, (tr) to cause (time) to pass rapidly
fleet
2/ fliːt /
noun
a number of warships organized as a tactical unit
all the warships of a nation
a number of aircraft, ships, buses, etc, operating together or under the same ownership
Fleet
3/ fliːt /
noun
a stream that formerly ran into the Thames between Ludgate Hill and Fleet Street and is now a covered sewer
Also called: Fleet Prison. (formerly) a London prison, esp used for holding debtors
fleet
4/ fliːt /
noun
a small coastal inlet; creek
Other Word Forms
- fleetly adverb
- fleetness noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of fleet1
Origin of fleet2
Origin of fleet3
Word History and Origins
Origin of fleet1
Origin of fleet2
Origin of fleet3
Example Sentences
He’d simply typed in the date he invented time travel for a few fleeting seconds of nostalgia, intending all the while to ditch his teen sidekick and zoom away to explore the 21st century.
“You have to start with building out a very fungible fleet,” he said on the call.
Ukraine barely has a navy and has taken out 35% of Russia’s Black Sea fleet.
With roughly 70 of them, the U.S.’s nuclear-submarine fleet outnumbers China by more than five to one, according to U.S. military and third-party estimates.
The sale doesn’t include Litasco’s Dubai unit, which was sanctioned by the U.K. in July for its role in moving Russian oil on so-called “shadow fleet” vessels.
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