flea market |
a market, usu. outdoors, at which mostly secondhand goods are sold cheaply. |
fleck |
a small patch of light or color. [3 definitions] |
flection |
the act of bending or flexing, or the condition of being bent or flexed. [4 definitions] |
fled |
past tense and past participle of flee. |
fledge |
to tend (a young bird) and prepare it for flight. [4 definitions] |
fledgling |
a young bird that has just grown flight feathers or learned to fly. [2 definitions] |
flee |
to escape by moving rapidly away; run away. [2 definitions] |
fleece |
the wool of a sheep or other animal, esp. the total yield of wool at one shearing. [7 definitions] |
fleecy |
of, made of, covered with, or like fleece. |
fleer1 |
to sneer, snicker, or laugh mockingly; mock. [2 definitions] |
fleer2 |
one that flees. |
fleet1 |
a group of naval ships under one command or grouped for one purpose. [3 definitions] |
fleet2 |
swift and nimble. [5 definitions] |
fleet admiral |
the highest rank for a U.S. naval officer, created and conferred only during World War II. |
fleeting |
passing or disappearing quickly; transient; ephemeral. |
Fleet Street |
the journalism establishment in London, England, so called after the street on which many newspaper offices are located. |
Fleming |
a native of Flanders, or a descendant thereof. [2 definitions] |
Flemish |
of or pertaining to Flanders or its people, culture, language, or the like. [3 definitions] |
flense |
to strip (blubber or skin), or to strip (a whale or seal) of blubber or skin. |
flesh |
the soft tissue beneath the skin and surrounding the bones of an animal or human body, including muscle and fat. [9 definitions] |
flesh-colored |
having the color of human skin, often a Caucasian's skin. |