F
Idioms beginning with "F"
Part of speech, explanation, example sentences, pronunciation
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Contents of F:
[flare up] {v.}
1. To burn brightly for a short time especially after having died down.
The fire flared up again and then died.
2. To become suddenly angry.
The mayor flared up at the reporter's remark.
* /The mother flared up at her […]
[flare-up] {n.}
The reoccurrence of an infection or an armed conflict.
He had a flare-up of his arthritis.
There was a bad flare-up of hostilities in some countries.
[flash card] {n.}
A card with numbers or words on it that is used in teaching, a class.
The teacher used flash cards to drill the class in addition.
[flash in the pan] {n. phr.}, {slang}
A person or thing that starts out well but does not continue.
The new quarterback was a flash in the pan.
* /Mary got 100 on the first test in arithmetic but it was just a flash in the pan because she failed […]
[flat as a pancake] {adj. phr.}
Very level; very flat; having no mountains or hills.
A great part of the American Midwest is as flat as a pancake.
[flatfoot] {n.}, {slang}, {derogatory}
A policeman.
"What does Joe do for a living? — He's a flatfoot."
[flat-footed] {adj.}, {informal}
1. Straightforward; forthright; direct; outright.
The governor issued a flat-footed denial of the accusation.
He came out flat-footed against the idea.
2. Not ready; not prepared; — usually used with "catch".
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