Flotillas [noun]
Definition of Flotillas:
small fleet
Opposite/Antonyms of Flotillas:
-
Sentence/Example of Flotillas:
It’s done in summer from flotillas of small boats that prowl in water from knee-high to 8 feet deep.
During very popular seasons, flotillas of boats with all manner of snorkelers and scuba divers hit the water seeking “bugs.”
The flotilla would also contain one larger balloon hoisting a heavier instrument known as a mass spectrometer—a machine capable of identifying complex biological molecules like proteins.
Here the river turned abruptly northwest, and in the bay formed by its curve lay a flotilla of log rafts.
I must confess, however, that the French appeared to me equally mad, in expecting any thing from their flotilla.
I demanded of this veteran, pointing to the flotilla, when the Emperor intended to invade England?
Amidst such scenery the expeditionary flotilla began its voyage at eleven o'clock.
With a gentle breeze off shore the flotilla started in nearly the order assigned to it.
To protect the island a little flotilla of four boats, manned each by five or six men, was kept sailing around it day and night.
Of course, the people on board quite naturally thought they were being attacked by a savage flotilla.