| 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.
|
| 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.
|
| 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.
|
| 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,
|
| 46. | flash on, Slang.
|

| a lamp for providing momentary illumination of the subject of a photograph. |
,| 1. | to move, act, or progress with speed, impetuosity, or violence. |
| 2. | to dash, esp. to dash forward for an attack or onslaught. |
| 3. | to appear, go, pass, etc., rapidly or suddenly: The blood rushed to his face. |
| 4. | Football. to carry the ball on a running play or plays. |
| 5. | to perform, accomplish, or finish with speed, impetuosity, or violence: They rushed the work to make the deadline. |
| 6. | to carry or convey with haste: to rush an injured person to the hospital. |
| 7. | to cause to move, act, or progress quickly; hurry: He rushed his roommate to get to the party on time. |
| 8. | to send, push, force, impel, etc., with unusual speed or haste: to rush a bill through Congress. |
| 9. | to attack suddenly and violently; charge. |
| 10. | to overcome or capture (a person, place, etc.). |
| 11. | Informal. to heap attentions on; court intensively; woo: to rush an attractive newcomer. |
| 12. | to entertain (a prospective fraternity or sorority member) before making bids for membership. |
| 13. | Football.
|
| 14. | the act of rushing; a rapid, impetuous, or violent onward movement. |
| 15. | a hostile attack. |
| 16. | an eager rushing of numbers of persons to some region that is being occupied or exploited, esp. because of a new mine: the gold rush to California. |
| 17. | a sudden appearance or access: a rush of tears. |
| 18. | hurried activity; busy haste: the rush of city life. |
| 19. | a hurried state, as from pressure of affairs: to be in a rush. |
| 20. | press of work, business, traffic, etc., requiring extraordinary effort or haste. |
| 21. | Football.
|
| 22. | a scrimmage held as a form of sport between classes or bodies of students in colleges. |
| 23. | rushes, Movies. daily (def. 4). |
| 24. | Informal. a series of lavish attentions paid a woman by a suitor: He gave her a big rush. |
| 25. | the rushing by a fraternity or sorority. |
| 26. | Also called flash. Slang. the initial, intensely pleasurable or exhilarated feeling experienced upon taking a narcotic or stimulant drug. |
| 27. | requiring or done in haste: a rush order; rush work. |
| 28. | characterized by excessive business, a press of work or traffic, etc.: The cafeteria's rush period was from noon to two in the afternoon. |
| 29. | characterized by the rushing of potential new members by a sorority or fraternity: rush week on the university campus. |

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. |
flash
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rush
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Rush (rŭsh), Benjamin. 1745-1813.
American physician, politician, and educator. A signer of the Declaration of Independence, he promoted the humane treatment of the mentally ill.
Flash file format, World-Wide Web
(Or "Shockwave Flash") A file format for delivering interactive vector graphics and animation on the World-Wide Web, developed by Macromedia.
(http://macromedia.com/software/flash/).
(1998-07-07)
flash
1.
(1996-09-08)
2. See Flash Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory.
(1997-02-02)
flash
In addition to the idiom beginning with flash, also see in a flash; quick as a wink (flash).