Matching Words
400 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Fiscs
- noun - a state treasury or exchequer or a royal treasury; originally the public treasury of Rome or the emperor's private purse
Fitch
- noun - dark brown mustelid of woodlands of Eurasia that gives off an unpleasant odor when threatened
Flack
- noun - a slick spokesperson who can turn any criticism to the advantage of their employer
- artillery designed to shoot upward at airplanes
- Edwin Harold Flack (5 November 1873 – 10 January 1935)[1] was an Australian athlete and tennis player. Also known as "Teddy",[2] he was Australia's first Olympian, being its only representative in 1896,[3] and the first Olympic champion in the 800 metre
- intense adverse criticism; "Clinton directed his fire at the Republican Party"; "the government has come under attack"; "don't give me any flak"
Fleck
- noun - a small contrasting part of something; "a bald spot"; "a leopard's spots"; "a patch of clouds"; "patches of thin ice"; "a fleck of red"
- a small fragment of something broken off from the whole; "a bit of rock caught him in the eye"
- make a spot or mark onto; "The wine spotted the tablecloth"
Flick
- noun -
- a form of entertainment that enacts a story by sound and a sequence of images giving the illusion of continuous movement; "they went to a movie every Saturday night"; "the film was shot on location"
- a light sharp contact (usually with something flexible); "he gave it a flick with his finger"; "he felt the flick of a whip"
- a short stroke
- cause to move with a flick; "he flicked his Bic"
- flash intermittently; "The lights flicked on and off"
- look through a book or other written material; "He thumbed through the report"; "She leafed through the volume"
- remove with a flick (of the hand)
- shine unsteadily; "The candle flickered"
- throw or toss with a quick motion; "flick a piece of paper across the table"; "jerk his head"
- touch or hit with a light, quick blow; "flicked him with his hand"
- twitch or flutter; "the paper flicked"
Flock
- noun - (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent; "a batch of letters"; "a deal of trouble"; "a lot of money"; "he made a mint on the stock market"; "see the rest of the winners in our huge passel of photos"; "it must have cost plenty"; "a slew of journalists"; "a wad of money"
- a church congregation guided by a pastor
- a group of birds
- a group of sheep or goats
- an orderly crowd; "a troop of children"
- come together as in a cluster or flock; "The poets constellate in this town every summer"
- move as a crowd or in a group; "Tourists flocked to the shrine where the statue was said to have shed tears"
- Soft material for stuffing mattresses, cushions etc.
Flocs
- noun - a small loosely aggregated mass of flocculent material suspended in or precipitated from a liquid
Force
- noun - (of a law) having legal validity; "the law is still in effect"
- (physics) the influence that produces a change in a physical quantity; "force equals mass times acceleration"
- a group of people having the power of effective action; "he joined forces with a band of adventurers"
- a powerful effect or influence; "the force of his eloquence easily persuaded them"
- a putout of a base runner who is required to run; the putout is accomplished by holding the ball while touching the base to which the runner must advance before the runner reaches that base; "the shortstop got the runner at second on a force"
- a unit that is part of some military service; "he sent Caesar a force of six thousand men"
- an act of aggression (as one against a person who resists); "he may accomplish by craft in the long run what he cannot do by force and violence in the short one"
- cause to move by pulling; "draw a wagon"; "pull a sled"
- do forcibl
Frack
- unknown - Pressurise, using water, to force the release of a gas from a substrata of rock.