7 results for: Flies
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fly1
Audio Help [flahy] Pronunciation Key verb, flew or, for 11, 19, flied, flown, fly·ing, noun, plural flies.
—Related forms
Audio Help [flahy] Pronunciation Key verb, flew or, for 11, 19, flied, flown, fly·ing, noun, plural flies. –verb (used without object)
–verb (used with object)
–noun
—Verb phrase
—Idioms
| 1. | to move through the air using wings. |
| 2. | to be carried through the air by the wind or any other force or agency: bits of paper flying about. |
| 3. | to float or flutter in the air: flags flying in the breeze. |
| 4. | to travel in an aircraft or spacecraft. |
| 5. | to move suddenly and quickly; start unexpectedly: He flew from the room. |
| 6. | to change rapidly and unexpectedly from one state or position to another: The door flew open. |
| 7. | to flee; escape. |
| 8. | to travel in space: The probe will fly past the planet. |
| 9. | to move or pass swiftly: How time flies! |
| 10. | to move with an aggressive surge: A mother fox will fly at anyone approaching her kits. |
| 11. | Baseball.
|
| 12. | Informal. to be acceptable, believable, or feasible: It seemed like a good idea, but it just wouldn't fly. |
| 13. | to make (something) float or move through the air: to fly a kite. |
| 14. | to operate (an aircraft, spacecraft, or the like). |
| 15. | to hoist aloft, as for display, signaling, etc.: to fly a flag. |
| 16. | to operate an aircraft or spacecraft over: to fly the Pacific. |
| 17. | to transport or convey by air: We fly merchandise to Boston. |
| 18. | to escape from; flee: to fly someone's wrath. |
| 19. | Theater.
|
| 20. | a strip of material sewn along one edge of a garment opening for concealing buttons, zippers, or other fasteners. |
| 21. | a flap forming the door of a tent. |
| 22. | Also called tent fly. a piece of canvas extending over the ridgepole of a tent and forming an outer roof. |
| 23. | an act of flying; a flight. |
| 24. | the course of a flying object, as a ball. |
| 25. | Baseball. fly ball. |
| 26. | British. a light, covered, public carriage drawn by one horse; hansom; hackney coach. |
| 27. | Machinery. a horizontal arm, weighted at each end, that pivots about the screw of a press so that when the screw is lowered the momentum of the fly will increase the force of the press. |
| 28. | Also called fan. Horology. a regulating device for chime and striking mechanisms, consisting of an arrangement of vanes on a revolving axis. |
| 29. | Printing.
|
| 30. | (on a flag)
|
| 31. | flies. Also called fly loft. Theater. the space above the stage used chiefly for storing scenery and equipment. |
| 32. | Nautical. a propellerlike device streamed to rotate and transfer information on speed to a mechanical log. |
| 33. | fly out, Baseball, Softball. to be put out by hitting a fly ball that is caught by a player of the opposing team. |
| 34. | fly blind. blind (def. 33). |
| 35. | fly in the face of, to act in defiance of (authority, custom, etc.). Also, fly in the teeth of. |
| 36. | fly off the handle. handle (def. 16). |
| 37. | go fly a kite, Slang.
|
| 38. | let fly,
|
| 39. | on the fly,
|
[Origin: bef. 900; ME flīen, OE fléogan; c. OHG fliogan, G fliegen, ON fljuga
]
] —Related forms
fly·a·ble, adjective
fly·a·bil·i·ty, noun
—Synonyms 1. Fly, flit, flutter, hover, soar refer to moving through the air as on wings. Fly is the general term: Birds fly. Airplanes fly. To flit is to make short rapid flights from place to place: A bird flits from tree to tree. To flutter is to agitate the wings tremulously, either without flying or in flying only short distances: A young bird flutters out of a nest and in again. To hover is to linger in the air, or to move over or about something within a narrow area or space: hovering clouds; a hummingbird hovering over a blossom. To soar is to (start to) fly upward to a great height usually with little advance in any other direction, or else to (continue to) fly at a lofty height without visible movement of the wings: Above our heads an eagle was soaring.
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
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Flies
To learn more about Flies visit Britannica.com
| © 2008 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. |
fly2
Audio Help [flahy] Pronunciation Key
—Related forms
Audio Help [flahy] Pronunciation Key –noun, plural flies.
—Idiom
| 1. | Also called true fly. any of numerous two-winged insects of the order Diptera, esp. of the family Muscidae, as the common housefly. |
| 2. | any of various winged insects, as the mayfly or firefly. |
| 3. | Angling. a fishhook dressed with hair, feathers, silk, tinsel, etc., so as to resemble an insect or small fish, for use as a lure or bait. |
| 4. | (initial capital letter ) Astronomy. the constellation Musca. |
| 5. | fly in the ointment, a detrimental factor; detraction: If there's one fly in the ointment, it's that there may not be the money to finish the job. |
[Origin: bef. 950; ME flīe, OE fléoge, flȳge; c. MD vliege (D vlieg), OHG flioga (G Fliege); akin to fly1
]
] —Related forms
flyless, adjective
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
| flies
Audio Help (flīz) Pronunciation Key
v. Third person singular present tense of fly1. |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| fly 1
Audio Help (flī) Pronunciation Key
v. flew (flōō), flown (flōn), fly·ing, flies (flīz) v. intr.
v. tr.
n. pl. flies
Phrasal Verb(s): fly at To attack fiercely; assault: The dogs flew at each other's throats. Idiom(s): fly high To be elated: They were flying high after their first child was born. Idiom(s): fly off the handle Informal To become suddenly enraged: flew off the handle when the train was finally canceled. Idiom(s): let fly
Idiom(s): on the fly
[Middle English flien, from Old English flēogan; see pleu- in Indo-European roots.] fly'a·ble adj. |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| fly 2
Audio Help (flī) Pronunciation Key
n. pl. flies
[Middle English flie, from Old English flēoge; see pleu- in Indo-European roots.] |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| flies | |
noun | |
| (theater) the space over the stage (out of view of the audience) used to store scenery (drop curtains) |
| WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University. |
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