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...one of its engines suffered a bird strike... Hello Sue, Qantas hit by bird strike - Yahoo!7 Quote:
- ...one of its engines had a bird strike... - ...one of its engines took a bird strike... - ...one of its engines experienced a bird strike... Are these all fine? By the way, Sue, could you set eslHQ's clock to the correct time? I'm afraid the clock is about three minutes fast. |
Re: ...one of its engines suffered a bird strike... Hi Oden, a. "had" didn't sound right at all to me at first, but it is used : On 1 September 1998, a Boeing 767 had a bird strike with a large flock of geese ... Then someone came on the PA and said we'd had a bird strike .. I was having a really good run and then I had a bird strike ... b. "took" also sounded a bit unusual in this context. It collocates OK with "blow" and "hit"... Ward took a blow to the head Sunday from New England's James Sanders that resulted in what the Steelers are calling a neck injury. Prospects for U.S. economic growth took a hit this week... but I wasn't sure about " bird strike". But when I Googled it ... Early indications are that US Airways Flight 1549 took a bird strike in each engine I took a bird strike on takeoff from Shobdon. ...could it be possible that the engine took a bird strike? c. "experienced" - I liked this one intuitively and I found several examples on Google If a flight has experienced a bird strike,... Shortly after take off from Amsterdam Schipol, the crew of the KLM aircraft experienced a bird strike. The plane bound for Phoenix experienced a bird strike during take-off and was forced to return to the airport. ... plus others. It came up as often in fact as "suffered a bird strike". Here are some more examples of that : An American Airlines MD-83 flight from Saint Louis, Missouri enroute to Los Angeles, California suffered a bird strike to it's right engine ... ...a Thomsonfly Boeing 757 from Manchester Airport, UK to Lanzarote Airport, Spain suffered a bird strike when at least one bird, ... The Heli Inter Guayana helicopter was flying low over the jungle when it suffered a bird strike So they're all possible. But if you look at the examples (and check the sources on Google) you'll find that have/take are used mainly informally - to report what people actually said, or on forums etc. When the words are used in more neutral or formal contexts (official reports on bird strikes, newspaper articles etc) then experience/suffer are chosen. So they're not all equivalent. Puts you right off flying... I'm afraid I have no control over the clock. In fact, I hadn't even realised there was one. I'm just one of several people who moderate the forums. Send Eric a message on the "Site Suggestions and Feedback" Forum and he may be able to sort it out. Odd though - on my computer it's showing 17 minutes slow... |
Re: ...one of its engines suffered a bird strike... Thank you for the good examples that you've provided, Sue. |
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