1. midair - Noun
2. midair - Adjective
some point in the air; above ground level
Source: WordNetYour work is to keep cranking the flywheel that turns the gears that spin the belt in the engine of belief that keeps you and your desk in midair. Annie Dillard
I still felt like I might hurl, and I thought about how awful that would be in midair. James Patterson
In actuality, Muppets was a word we just coined. It was merely to be the name of our act.... I used to say to people that it was a combination of 'marionettes' and 'puppets.'... But then I stopped telling this lie, and I'm back to the truth: It just came out of midair. Jim Henson
Yul had simply launched himself at the guy from some distance away, and body-checked him at full speed, stopping on a dime in midair as he transferred all of his energy into the target. "Conservation of momentum," he announced, "it's not just a good idea-it's the law!" Neal Stephenson
the planes collided in midair Source: Internet
A Corsair was responsible for one of the kills, although this was due to a midair collision. Source: Internet