Fleet
Appearance
Fleet may mean:
Vehicles
[change | change source]A fleet is a collection of ships or vehicles:
- Fleet vehicles, two or more vehicles
- Fishing fleet
- Naval fleet, large group of warships
- A group of small ships or flotilla
- A group of racing sailboats
- Starfleet, fictional group in Star Trek
- Ugs fleet, a collection of military ground sensors.
Places
[change | change source]- Fleet, Kent, a waterway in the Thames marshes, England
- Fleet, Dorset, England
- Fleet, Hampshire, England
- River Fleet, river in London, England
- Fleet, Lincolnshire, England
- Gatehouse of Fleet, small town in Scotland
- Water of Fleet, a river in Scotland
- Fleet, Alberta, Canada
People
[change | change source]- Beth Van Fleet (born 1977), American volleyball player
- Charles Browne Fleet (1843-1916), American pharmacist
- David Fleet (born 1954), Canadian politician
- Frank Fleet (1848-1900), American baseball player
- Frederick Fleet (1887-1965), British sailor and Titanic survivor
- Greg Fleet (born 1960), Australian comedian
- James Fleet (born 1954), British actor
- James Van Fleet (1892-1992), American general
- Jo Van Fleet (1914-1996), American actress
- Pat Fleet (born 1943), American voice actress
- Preston Fleet (1934-1995), American businessman
- Reuben Fleet (1887-1975), American aviation pioneer
- Stephan Szpak-Fleet (born 1979), Polish-born American actor
- Stephen Fleet (1936-2006), British administrator
- William Van Fleet (1852-1923), American judge
Other uses
[change | change source]- Fleet Aircraft
- FleetBoston Financial, financial institution
- Fleet Farm, American farm and ranch supply store chain
- Fleet Foxes, American band
- Fleet (laxative), brand name for bisacody
- Fleet services, English motorway service station
- Fleet Spurs F.C.
- Ebbsfleet United F.C., whose nickname is The Fleet
- Fleet (boardgame), a strategy card game published by Eagle Games
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Fleet. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |