Aloft in a sentence as an adverb

Yes, this is like saying "hammer" while holding a hammer aloft.

> Loon balloons are superpressure, which enable them to stay aloft for 100+ days at a time.

Point arms up into sky, cast yourself aloft into the heavens, if the earth doesn't have gravity.

Also, for wings, it just has to be glider plus produce enough thrust off the flapping to keep it aloft, yeah?

Transmitting at 100W takes probably closer to 500W of power and your drone/airplane has to stay aloft as well.

Sounds like they're just going to be replacing them all a few times a year: each balloon is expected to "stay aloft for 100+ days at a time.

"I'm not sure if aloft is even the right word, there hasn't been a time in recent memory where I wasn't able to trigger a "Whoops!

I imagine that if the Precious had been aloft on board an eagle, then somehow Gollum would have made his way up there!

The good news is that blimps rely passively on the relationship between their overall density and that of the atmosphere to stay aloft.

There are day-to-day variations in weather patterns and building something that can stay aloft and provide a steady picture within storms is quite challenging indeed.

Every time I use Twitter, I ask myself, "How long can this amazing and terrible zeppelin of bubblegum, balsa wood and toilet paper possibly stay aloft?

What that actually means is if a bumblebee is scaled up to the size of a bird, say, it can't stay aloft because its wing area is only increasing as the square, but its volume and mass as the cube, of the size change.

It's that and the "let's punch ourselves in the face" aspect of taking a story that you want to minimize, and deciding months later when it has completely blown over to send it aloft in a gigantic fusillade of skyrockets and roman candles.

In order for the human to be held aloft for any significant period of time by the recoiling bungee cord after it is cut, the cord must be relatively heavy - enough to move the center of mass of the cord+human system well away from the human.

I've talked about the ones that have caught my eye below.>>> - camera drones to provide a "real-time Google Earth" << forgetting the costs associated with maintaining a large fleet of drones, every drone takes up energy to not only stay aloft but to beam down pictures using whatever radio gear is being used at the end, drone by drone those costs will add up and the total cost of keeping an entire fleet in the air will be prohibitive.

Aloft definitions

adverb

at or on or to the masthead or upper rigging of a ship; "climbed aloft to unfurl the sail"

adverb

upward; "the good news sent her spirits aloft"

adverb

at or to great height; high up in or into the air; "eagles were soaring aloft"; "dust is whirled aloft"

adverb

in the higher atmosphere above the earth; "weather conditions aloft are fine"