1. Dictionary

    flash
    [flaSH]
    verb
    flash (verb) · flashes (third person present) · flashed (past tense) · flashed (past participle) · flashing (present participle)
    1. (of a light or something that reflects light) shine in a bright but brief, sudden, or intermittent way:
      "the lights started flashing"
      • cause to shine briefly or suddenly:
        "the oncoming car flashed its lights"
      • shine or show a light to send (a signal):
        "red lights started to flash a warning"
      • give (a swift or sudden look):
        "Carrie flashed a glance in his direction" · "she flashed him a withering look"
      • express a sudden burst of emotion, especially anger, with a swift or sudden look:
        "she glared at him, her eyes flashing"
    2. move or pass very quickly:
      "a look of terror flashed across Kirov's face" · "another stray thought flashed through her mind" · "the scenery flashed by"
      • send (news or information) swiftly by means of telegraphy or telecommunications:
        "the story was flashed around the world"
    3. display (an image, words, or information) suddenly on a television or computer screen or electronic sign, typically briefly or repeatedly:
      "suddenly the screen flashes a message"
      • (of an image or message) be displayed briefly or repeatedly on a screen:
        "the election results flashed on the screen"
      • informal
        hold up or show (something, often proof of one's identity) quickly before replacing it:
        "she opened her purse and flashed her ID card"
      • informal
        make a conspicuous display of (something) so as to impress or attract attention:
        "they all flash their money around"
      • informal
        (of a man) show one's genitals briefly in public:
        "on my way back to work I was flashed at by some weirdo"
    noun
    flash (noun) · flashes (plural noun) · Flash (noun)
    1. a sudden brief burst of bright light or a sudden glint from a reflective surface:
      "a lightning flash" · "the grenade exploded with a yellow flash of light"
    2. a sudden instance or manifestation of a quality, understanding, or humor:
      "she had a flash of inspiration"
      • a news flash.
    3. a camera attachment that produces a brief very bright light, used for taking photographs in poor light:
      "an electronic flash" · "if in any doubt, use flash" · "flash photography"
    4. computing
      trademark in us
      a platform for producing and displaying animation and video in web browsers.
    5. excess plastic or metal forced between facing surfaces as two halves of a mold close up, forming a thin projection on the finished object:
      "flap wheels are ideal for grinding off fiberglass flash"
    adjective
    flash (adjective) · flasher (comparative adjective) · flashest (superlative adjective)
    1. informal
      (of a thing) ostentatiously expensive, elaborate, or up to date:
      "a flash new car"
      • (of a person) superficially attractive because stylish and full of brash charm:
        "he was carrying this money around and trying to be flash"
    2. archaic
      relating to thieves, prostitutes, or the underworld, especially their language.
    Origin
    Middle English (in the sense ‘splash water about’): probably imitative; compare with flush and splash.
    flash
    [flaSH]
    noun
    BRITISH ENGLISH
    flash (noun) · flashes (plural noun)
    1. a water-filled hollow formed by subsidence, especially any of those due to rock salt extraction in or near Cheshire in central England:
      "sandpits and flashes also attract visiting birds"
    Origin
    Middle English (in the sense ‘a marshy place’): from Old French flache, variant of Picard and Norman dialect flaque, from Middle Dutch vlacke. The current sense dates from the late 19th century.
    Translate flash to
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    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. (of a light or something that reflects light) shine in a bright but brief, sudden, or intermittent way:
      • move or pass very quickly:
        • display (an image, words, or information) suddenly on a television or computer screen or electronic sign, typically briefly or repeatedly:
          • make a conspicuous display of (something) so as to impress or attract attention:
          • (of a man) show one's genitals briefly in public:
            expose oneself
            show/display/reveal one's genitals
            commit indecent exposure
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      2. People also ask
        What does a flash mean?A flash is a sudden burst of light or of something shiny or bright. A sudden flash of lightning lit everything up for a second. The wire snapped at the wall plug with a blue flash and the light fused. A jay emerged from the juniper bush in a flash of blue feathers.
        What does a flash of light mean?A flash of light is a sudden, short burst of it. ...a sudden flash of lightning. If a light flashes, or if you flash a light, it shines brightly and suddenly. Lightning flashed among the dark clouds. Read about the team of authors behind Collins Dictionaries.
        What does Flash mean in a sentence?In addition to the idiom beginning with flash , also see in a flash; quick as a wink (flash). Flash, glance, glint, glitter mean to send forth a sudden gleam (or gleams) of bright light. To flash is to send forth light with a sudden, transient brilliancy: A shooting star flashed briefly.
        What is another word for flash?Some common synonyms of flash are gleam, glimmer, glint, glisten, glitter, shimmer, and sparkle. While all these words mean "to send forth light," flash implies a sudden outburst of bright light. When is it sensible to use gleam instead of flash?
         
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