| 1. | a brief, sudden burst of bright light: a flash of lightning. |
| 2. | a sudden, brief outburst or display of joy, wit, etc. |
| 3. | a very brief moment; instant: I'll be back in a flash. |
| 4. | Informal. flashlight (def. 1). |
| 5. | superficial, meretricious, or vulgar showiness; ostentatious display. |
| 6. | Also called news flash. Journalism. a brief dispatch sent by a wire service, usually transmitting preliminary news of an important story or development. Compare bulletin (def. 2). |
| 7. | Photography.
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| 8. | the sudden flame or intense heat produced by a bomb or other explosive device. |
| 9. | a sudden thought, insight, inspiration, or vision. |
| 10. | Slang. rush (def. 25). |
| 11. | Metallurgy.
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| 12. | Poker. a hand containing all five suits in a game played with a five-suit pack. |
| 13. | a device, as a lock or sluice, for confining and releasing water to send a boat down a shallow stream. |
| 14. | the rush of water thus produced. |
| 15. | hot flash. |
| 16. | Obsolete. the cant or jargon of thieves, vagabonds, etc. |
| 17. | to break forth into sudden flame or light, esp. transiently or intermittently: a buoy flashing in the distance. |
| 18. | to gleam. |
| 19. | to burst suddenly into view or perception: The answer flashed into his mind. |
| 20. | to move like a flash. |
| 21. | to speak or behave with sudden anger, outrage, or the like (often fol. by out): to flash out at a stupid remark. |
| 22. | to break into sudden action. |
| 23. | Slang. to open one's clothes and expose the genitals suddenly, and usually briefly, in public. |
| 24. | Slang. to experience the intense effects of a narcotic or stimulant drug. |
| 25. | to dash or splash, as the sea or waves. |
| 26. | Archaic. to make a flash or sudden display. |
| 27. | to emit or send forth (fire or light) in sudden flashes. |
| 28. | to cause to flash, as powder by ignition or a sword by waving. |
| 29. | to send forth like a flash. |
| 30. | to communicate instantaneously, as by radio or telegraph. |
| 31. | to make an ostentatious display of: He's forever flashing a large roll of bills. |
| 32. | to display suddenly and briefly: She flashed her ID card at the guard. |
| 33. | to change (water) instantly into steam by pouring or directing onto a hot surface. |
| 34. | to increase the flow of water in (a river, channel, etc.). |
| 35. | Glassmaking and Ceramics.
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| 36. | Building Trades. to protect from leakage with flashing. |
| 37. | Cards. to expose (a card) in the process of dealing. |
| 38. | Archaic. to dash or splash (water). |
| 39. | sudden and brief: a flash storm. |
| 40. | showy or ostentatious. |
| 41. | caused by or used as protection against flash: flash injuries; flash clothing. |
| 42. | counterfeit or sham. |
| 43. | belonging to or connected with thieves, vagabonds, etc., or their cant or jargon. |
| 44. | of or pertaining to followers of boxing, racing, etc. |
| 45. | flash in the pan,
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| 46. | flash on, Slang.
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flash (flāsh) v. flashed, flash·ing, flash·es v. intr.
[Middle English flashen, to splash, variant of flasken, of imitative origin.] Synonyms: These verbs mean to send forth light. Flash refers to a sudden and brilliant but short-lived outburst of light: A bolt of lightning flashed across the horizon. |
Someone or something that promises great success but soon fails: “The rock group that was all the rage last year turned out to be just another flash in the pan.”
flash
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flash in the pan
An effort or person that promises great success but fails. For example, His second novel proved to be a flash in the pan, or We had high hopes for the new director, but she was a flash in the pan. This metaphoric term alludes to the 17th-century flintlock musket, which could be fired only when the flash of the priming powder in the lockpan ignited the charge in the bore. When it failed to ignite, there was only a flash in the pan and the gun did not shoot.