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Noun
But instead of injectors squirting fuel on the intake side of the heads near the valley of the vee, the injectors are located between the exhaust valves, a design cribbed from Chevy's Indy V-6.—Tony Quiroga, Car and Driver, 26 Oct. 2021 Flocks of hundreds of sharp-eyed cranes lift off the Red River, moving and shifting in masses, not in the classic vee of migrating geese, but more like iron filings shivering around a magnet.—Andrew McKean, Outdoor Life, 20 Oct. 2020 Best lures have been Choo Choo Buzzbaits and the Bull Wake Shad cranked to make a vee-wake at the surface.—Frank Sargeant, al, 18 Oct. 2019 According to Navistar's website, its Huntsville facility covers almost 700,000 square feet and produces the company's line of vee engines.—Paul Gattis | Pgattis@al.com, al.com, 14 June 2019 Most new turbocharged V-6s or V-8s are a hot-vee design—Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and even Ford’s 6.7-liter Power Stroke diesel.—Ezra Dyer, Popular Mechanics, 27 Dec. 2018 In her experiment, Wilkinson set up a V-shaped wire mesh with a bowl of treats placed inside the point of the vee.—Smriti Rao, Discover Magazine, 31 Mar. 2010
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