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1 flurry
A n2 ( bustle) agitation f soudaine ; a flurry of activity un tourbillon d'activité ; a flurry of excitement un frisson d'agitation ; a flurry of interest un mouvement d'intérêt ; a flurry of wings un bruissement d'ailes ; -
2 flurry
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3 flurry
1 noun(a) (of snow, wind) rafale f∎ a flurry of activity un branle-bas de combat;∎ there has been a late flurry of activity on the Stock Market on a assisté à une reprise soudaine de l'activité boursière en fin de journée;∎ to be in a flurry of excitement être tout excité(usu passive) agiter, troubler -
4 flurry
American - flurries; noun1) (a sudden rush (of wind etc); light snow: A flurry of wind made the door bang; a flurry of excitement; The children expected a lot of snow but there were only flurries.) rafale2) (a confusion: She was in a flurry.) émoi -
5 flurry
agitation f;∎ there has been a late flurry of activity on the Stock Market à la Bourse on a assisté à une reprise soudaine de l'activité en fin de journée -
6 flurries
American; see flurry
См. также в других словарях:
Flurry — Flur ry, n.; pl. {Flurries}. [Prov. E. flur to ruffle.] 1. A sudden and brief blast or gust; a light, temporary breeze; as, a flurry of wind. [1913 Webster] 2. A light shower or snowfall accompanied with wind. [1913 Webster] Like a flurry of snow … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Flurry — may refer to:* , a sudden shower or snowfall with a gust of wind * Flurry, a Mac OS X screensaver * Flurry, a Super Mario series enemy character … Wikipedia
flurry — n bustle, fuss, ado, *stir, pother Analogous words: perturbation, agitation, disturbance, discomposure (see corresponding verbs at DISCOMPOSE): *haste, hurry flurry vb fluster, agitate, perturb, disturb, *discompose, disquiet Analogous words:… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
flurry — [n] commotion, burst ado, agitation, brouhaha, bustle, confusion, disturbance, excitement, ferment, flap*, flaw, fluster, flutter, furor, fuss, gust, haste, hurry, outbreak, pother, spell, spurt, squall, stir*, to do, tumult, turbulence, turmoil … New thesaurus
Flurry — Flur ry, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Flurried}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Flurrying}.] To put in a state of agitation; to excite or alarm. H. Swinburne. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
flurry — index confuse (bewilder), dispatch (promptness), haste, outburst, perturb Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
Flurry — m Irish: variant of FLORRY (SEE Florry) … First names dictionary
flurry — snow squall 1828, Amer.Eng., with earlier senses of commotion, etc., dating to 1680s; perhaps onomatopoeic, or else from 17c. flurr to scatter, fly with a whirring noise, perhaps from M.E. flouren to sprinkle, as with flour (late 14c.). As a verb … Etymology dictionary
flurry — ► NOUN (pl. flurries) 1) a small swirling mass of snow, leaves, etc. moved by a sudden gust of wind. 2) a sudden short spell of commotion or excitement. 3) a number of things arriving suddenly and simultaneously. ► VERB (flurries, flurried) ▪ … English terms dictionary
flurry — [flʉr′ē] n. pl. flurries [< obs. flurr, to scatter (? echoic), prob. after HURRY ] ☆ 1. a sudden, brief rush of wind; gust ☆ 2. a gust of rain or snow 3. a sudden confusion or commotion ☆ 4. a brief fluctuation in stock market prices or… … English World dictionary
flurry — noun 1 small amount of rain/snow ADJECTIVE ▪ snow PHRASES ▪ a flurry of snow 2 short sudden burst of sth ADJECTIVE ▪ brief, sudden … Collocations dictionary