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  2. Flank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flank

    Flank may refer to: Flank (anatomy), part of the abdomen Flank steak, a cut of beef; Part of the external anatomy of a horse; Flank speed, a nautical term; Flank opening, a chess opening; A term in Australian rules football; The side of a military unit, as in a flanking maneuver; Flanking, a sound path in architectural acoustics

  3. Signal passed at danger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_passed_at_danger

    Two-aspect signal at danger (stop) in the United Kingdom. A signal passed at danger (SPAD), known in the United States as a stop signal overrun (SSO) [1] and in Canada as passing a stop signal, [2]: 75 is an event on a railway where a train passes a stop signal without authority. [3]

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  5. Full Speed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_Speed

    Full Speed may refer to: . Full Speed, silent film western; Full Speed, Italian comedy film; Full Speed, French film; Full Speed, the album by Kid Ink; Full speed or flank speed, a nautical term referring to a ship's true maximum speed

  6. Talk:Flank speed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Flank_speed

    Because the word “flank” usually refers to the “side” of something, and because the earliest sailing warships had all their cannons facing either port or starboard, and even later WWI and WWII ships had the most firepower turned 90 degrees to the target, with nothing official to base this on, I always thought/assumed that ”flank speed” originally meant absolute maximum speed in ...

  7. Rear flank downdraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rear_flank_downdraft

    The rear flank downdraft can arise owing to negative buoyancy, which can be generated by cold anomalies produced at the rear of the supercell thunderstorm by evaporative cooling of precipitation or hail melting, or injection of dry and cooler air in the cloud, and by vertical perturbation pressure gradients that can arise from vertical gradients of vertical vorticity, stagnation of ...

  8. Flank (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flank_(anatomy)

    The flank or latus is the side of the body between the rib cage and the iliac bone of the hip (below the rib cage and above the ilium). [ 1 ] It is sometimes called the lumbar region.

  9. Oblique order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oblique_order

    The oblique order (also known as the 'declined flank') [1] is a military tactic whereby an attacking army focuses its forces to attack a single enemy flank.The force commander concentrates the majority of their strength on one flank and uses the remainder to fix the enemy line.