Flight Controls Ailerons, rudder and elevator driven by twin hydraulic servo-actuators, and push-pull rod linkage.
Such linkages facilitate business transactions and partly offset differences of interests between, say, manufacturers and banks.
The linkage is tight and the space between the doors is a few inches.
The linkage of wisdom with power can hardly have escaped a student-prince.
The four cylinder diesel units will interchange with the four cylinder petrols with suitable pipework and wiring and throttle linkage.
Word family
WORD FAMILYnounlinklinkageverblink
1[countable, uncountable] formal a link2(1)linkage between the linkage between wages and prices2[countable, uncountable] a system of links or connections3[singular, uncountable] a condition in a political or business agreement by which one country or company agrees to do something, only if the other promises to do something in return