Airplanes are big flying machines that help people travel across long distances quickly.
Imagine your toy car, it moves on the ground because you push it or it rolls on wheels. Now imagine a big version of that toy car, but instead of wheels, it has wings and goes up into the sky! That’s an airplane.
How Airplanes Work
Airplanes have special parts called wings. These wings help them stay in the air by pushing against the air, kind of like how your hand pushes water when you swim. The airplane also needs power to move, so it has engines that make loud noises and give it speed.
When an airplane takes off, it starts on a long road called a runway. It speeds up until it can leave the ground and fly into the sky, just like how your toy car might jump if you push it really fast!
What Airplanes Do
Once they’re in the air, airplanes can carry people or things from one place to another, like going from your house to a park on the other side of town, but much faster and higher up! They come back down when they want to land, just like how you jump off a slide and land on the ground.
Examples
- You describe a plane like it's a bird with engines.
- Imagine a toy airplane floating on air currents.
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See also
- Why Can't You Use Phones On Planes?
- How do Airplanes fly?
- Why you can't use phones on aircraft?
- How do airplanes actually fly? - Raymond Adkins?
- Do elevator manufacturers purposefully provide a door close button that doesn't?