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 fling [flɪŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 投掷, 急冲, 嘲弄

vt. 投, 丢下, 抛弃, 使陷入, 挥动, 嘲笑, 扫视

vi. 猛冲


  1. He flung himself into his work with renewed vigor.
    他又精神抖擞地投入自己的工作。
  2. She flung down her large handbag on the table.
    她把那只大手提包扔在桌子上。
  3. She flung on her coat and ran to the bus-stop.
    她匆匆穿上大衣就向公共汽车站跑去。


fling
flung
[ noun ]
  1. a usually brief attempt

  2. <noun.act>
    he took a crack at it
    I gave it a whirl
  3. a brief indulgence of your impulses

  4. <noun.act>
  5. the act of flinging

  6. <noun.act>
[ verb ]
  1. throw with force or recklessness

  2. <verb.contact>
    fling the frisbee
  3. move in an abrupt or headlong manner

  4. <verb.motion>
    He flung himself onto the sofa
  5. indulge oneself

  6. <verb.possession> splurge
    I splurged on a new TV
  7. throw or cast away

  8. <verb.possession>
    cast aside cast away cast out chuck out discard dispose put away throw away throw out toss toss away toss out
    Put away your worries


Fling \Fling\, v. i.
1. To throw; to wince; to flounce; as, the horse began to
kick and fling.

2. To cast in the teeth; to utter abusive language; to sneer;
as, the scold began to flout and fling.

3. To throw one's self in a violent or hasty manner; to rush
or spring with violence or haste.

And crop-full, out of doors he flings. --Milton.

I flung closer to his breast,
As sword that, after battle, flings to sheath.
--Mrs.
Browning.

{To fling out}, to become ugly and intractable; to utter
sneers and insinuations.


Fling \Fling\ (fl[i^]ng), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Flung}
(fl[u^]ng); p. pr. & vb. n. {Flinging}.] [OE. flingen,
flengen, to rush, hurl; cf. Icel. flengia to whip, ride
furiously, OSw. flenga to strike, Sw. fl["a]nga to romp, Dan.
flenge to slash.]
1. To cast, send, to throw from the hand; to hurl; to dart;
to emit with violence as if thrown from the hand; as, to
fing a stone into the pond.

'T is Fate that flings the dice: and, as she flings,
Of kings makes peasants, and of peasants kings.
--Dryden.

He . . . like Jove, his lighting flung. --Dryden.

I know thy generous temper well.
Fling but the appearance of dishonor on it,
It straight takes fire. --Addison.

2. To shed forth; to emit; to scatter.

The sun begins to fling
His flaring beams. --Milton.

Every beam new transient colors flings. --Pope.

3. To throw; to hurl; to throw off or down; to prostrate;
hence, to baffle; to defeat; as, to fling a party in
litigation.

His horse started, flung him, and fell upon him.
--Walpole.

{To fling about}, to throw on all sides; to scatter.

{To fling away}, to reject; to discard.

Cromwell, I charge thee, fling away ambition.
--Shak.


{To fling down}.
(a) To throw to the ground; esp., to throw in defiance, as
formerly knights cast a glove into the arena as a
challenge.

This question so flung down before the guests, .
. .
Was handed over by consent of all
To me who had not spoken. --Tennyson.
(b) To overturn; to demolish; to ruin.

{To fling in}, to throw in; not to charge in an account; as,
in settling accounts, one party flings in a small sum, or
a few days' work.

{To fling off}, to baffle in the chase; to defeat of prey;
also, to get rid of. --Addison.

{To fling open}, to throw open; to open suddenly or with
violence; as, to fling open a door.

{To fling out}, to utter; to speak in an abrupt or harsh
manner; as, to fling out hard words against another.

{To fling up}, to relinquish; to abandon; as, to fling up a
design.


Fling \Fling\, n.
1. A cast from the hand; a throw; also, a flounce; a kick;
as, the fling of a horse.

2. A severe or contemptuous remark; an expression of
sarcastic scorn; a gibe; a sarcasm.

I, who love to have a fling,
Both at senate house and king. --Swift.

3. A kind of dance; as, the Highland fling.

4. A trifing matter; an object of contempt. [Obs.]

England were but a fling
Save for the crooked stick and the gray goose wing.
--Old Proverb.

5. a short period during which one indulges one's wishes,
whims, or desires in an unrestrained manner.
[PJC]

6. a love affair.
[PJC]

7. a casual or brief attempt to accomplish something.
[informal]

Syn: shot.
[PJC]

8. a period during which one tries a new activity; as, he
took a fling at playing tennis.
[PJC]

{To have one's fling}, to enjoy one's self to the full; to
have a season of dissipation. --J. H. Newman. ``When I was
as young as you, I had my fling. I led a life of
pleasure.'' --D. Jerrold.

  1. There is scope for one last final fling downwards until the Federal Reserve tightens and the dollar stabilises.' Comments by Mr Robert Rubin, the White House chief economic adviser, further undermined the dollar.
  2. Mrs. Van Marter, who declined to be interviewed, told officials at the time that she was forced to fling the bird, "as big as a turkey," into a nearby palm tree to stop the attack.
  3. He claimed he had been mentally ill and controlled by the women and the club manager and hadn't benefited from or even enjoyed his fling.
  4. The same kind of vision lets us turn atoms into electricity, lets us fling rockets into space and bring them home again.
  5. After the war he took a brief fling at a movie career, playing himself in the John Wayne film "Sands of Iwo Jima." That was the extent of his acting career.
  6. It may be time then to fling wide the doors of the developed world.
  7. The way Mr. Jacobs describes it he became the owner of about 800,000 bushels of soft red winter wheat through a fling that irritated Board of Trade officials and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
  8. The ZR1 costs $31,683 more than the $32,455 Corvette. That's mainly because of the ZR1's 32-valve, eight-cylinder aluminum engine, which can fling the car from 0 to 60 miles per hour in just 4.3 seconds.
  9. East Germany spent a melancholy last day as a nation Tuesday before passing into history, leaving behind 40 years of communism and one brief, dizzy fling as a free country.
  10. Before your time runs out, what you do with the money is up to you _ buy a car, take some speculative fling, whatever you wish.
  11. And "Dirty Dancing" plays out a woman's adolescent fantasy: The heroine has a wild first fling with a gorgeous hunk and gets to keep her illusions about the dad she worships intact.
  12. If you do not have the courage to go the whole hog, you could start experimenting with some tartan ceramics, a cushion, or the odd rug or two to fling over a sofa.
  13. There are chapters on the England team, an account of his student fling with Cambridge United, but Arsenal is his abiding, dominating passion.
  14. One of the good things to come out of Tony Banks's stint as cultural supremo of the old Greater London Council, in the period of its last controversial fling before abolition, was the liberating of the Royal Festival Hall.
  15. He was a shy child whose parents hoped he would enter the priesthood. Instead he had a fling with bullfighting, then studied medicine for a time before turning to music.
  16. They had their fling, their love-hate relationship with Jerry Brown, who intrigued them and promised a lot (as governor) but delivered very little," Field said.
  17. Sometimes when the subway pulled into the station, he pressed himself against the tile walls so that he did not leap, drawn by the rushing headlight visible from blocks down the tunnel, urging him to fling his body onto the tracks.
  18. To get there, though, he'll have to fling aside some muscular and determined American bodies.
  19. Opposition parties and the anti-Pawar lobby in the Congress(I) party that have tried to use Mr Khairnar to fling dirt at their opponents have not succeeded.
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