Lieutenant Longcroft had a forced landing at Littlemore, near Oxford, and spent the night in the Littlemore lunatic asylum.
He'd at least get curious enough to slide down himself to see if it was only a forced landing.
That's another of the several dangers attached to this show--a forced landing.
Behind our own lines, a forced landing in the blasted desert is bad enough.
Not a nickel's worth of room for a forced landing.
Figured on getting here before dark but made a forced landing about 50 miles back when two of the spark plugs fouled and I had to replace them.
A forced landing in the heart of the Arctic would not find them unprepared and the stout, specially constructed wooden cockpit would provide them with a real shelter.
It was anything but an inviting spot for a forced landing.
This is commonly termed a "forced landing," and in every sense of the word it is one.
There is no pilot of any extensive flying experience who has not had to make a forced landing.
Now, I have never yet made a forced landing in strange country without having the mayor of the nearest village appear on the scene very soon afterward.
We were cautioned always to carry them where they could be quickly got at in case of a forced landing in enemy country.
When finally the Bellefonte operator got his man, he said hastily: "A flier is making a forced landing at your field right away.
That'll guide you all right if you don't have a forced landing.
And yet Hal Dane must come down to a forced landing--now--immediately.
A knock in a motor presages engine trouble, and engine trouble presages a forced landing.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "forced landing" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.