Monoplane
A monoplane is an aircraft with one main wing or pair of main wings,
in contrast to a biplane or triplane[?].
The main distinction in types of monoplane is how the wings attach to the fuselage:
Although they are now the norm, the popularity of monoplanes has varied through the history of flight.
Louis Bleriot flew across the English Channel in 1909 in a mid-wing monoplane of his own design.
The Fokker 'Eindecker' of 1915 was a successful fighter[?] aircraft.
Monoplanes went out of fashion again, until after 1930.
Most military aircraft of WW2 were monoplanes, as have been all turbo-jet[?] powered aircraft since.