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View synonyms for flash

flash

1

[flash]

noun

  1. a brief, sudden burst of bright light.

    The sky lit up with a flash of lightning.

    Synonyms: glare, gleam, flare
  2. a sudden, brief outburst or display of joy, wit, etc..

    Her brilliant eye for detail and quiet flashes of humor make the book a joy to read.

  3. a very brief moment; instant.

    I'll be back in a flash.

    Synonyms: wink, twinkling
  4. Informal.,  flashlight.

  5. Journalism.,  news flash.

  6. Photography.

    1. bright artificial light thrown briefly upon a subject during an exposure.

    2. flash lamp.

    3. flashbulb.

    4. electronic flash.

  7. the sudden flame or intense heat produced by a bomb or other explosive device.

  8. a sudden thought, insight, inspiration, or vision.

    I smelled the sea breeze and had a flash of my childhood summers at the beach.

  9. a showy or ostentatious display.

  10. Slang.,  rush.

  11. Metallurgy.

    1. a ridge of metal left on a casting by a seam between parts of the mold.

    2. a ridge formed at the edge of a forging or weld where excess metal has been squeezed out.

  12. Poker.,  a hand containing all five suits in a game played with a five-suit pack.

    1. a device, such as a lock or sluice, for confining and releasing water to send a boat down a shallow stream.

    2. the rush of water thus produced.

  13. hot flash.

  14. Obsolete.,  the cant or jargon of thieves, vagabonds, etc.



verb (used without object)

  1. to break forth into sudden flame or light, especially transiently or intermittently.

    We saw a buoy flashing in the distance.

  2. to gleam.

    The car's chrome bumpers flashed in the sun.

    Synonyms: scintillate
  3. to burst suddenly into view or perception.

    The answer flashed into his mind.

  4. to move very suddenly and quickly.

  5. to speak or behave with sudden anger, outrage, or the like (often followed byout ).

    to flash out at a stupid remark.

  6. to break into sudden action.

  7. Slang.,  to open one's clothes and expose the genitals suddenly, and usually briefly, in public.

  8. Slang.,  to experience the intense effects of a narcotic or stimulant drug.

  9. to dash or splash, as the sea or waves.

  10. Archaic.,  to make a flash or sudden display.

verb (used with object)

  1. to emit or send forth (fire or light) in sudden bursts.

  2. to cause to emit or reflect light.

    There was a driver tailgating them who kept flashing his high beams and honking his horn.

    A beekeeper I knew used to flash a mirror at his hive to help settle them.

  3. to communicate instantly.

    The airline flashed the updated flight time on the overhead display.

  4. to make an ostentatious display of.

    He's forever flashing a large roll of bills.

  5. to display suddenly and briefly.

    She flashed her ID card at the guard.

  6. to change (water) instantly into steam by pouring or directing onto a hot surface.

  7. to increase the flow of water in (a river, channel, etc.).

  8. Glassmaking and Ceramics.

    1. to coat (plain glass or a glass or ceramic object) with a layer of colored, opalescent, or white glass.

    2. to apply (such a layer).

    3. to color or make (glass) opaque by reheating.

  9. Building Trades.,  to protect from leakage with flashing.

  10. Computers.

    1. to write a program, file, etc. to the part of (a device's) memory that is reprogrammable and retains information even with the power turned off.

      If you're still having problems, you can flash the router.

    2. to write (a program, file, etc.) to the part of a device's memory that is reprogrammable and retains information even with the power turned off.

      I flashed the device's firmware using the latest version available.

  11. Cards.,  to expose (a card) in the process of dealing.

  12. Archaic.,  to dash or splash (water).

adjective

  1. happening suddenly and usually lasting a short time.

    a flash storm.

  2. very brief, fast, or short: flash poetry and fiction.

    flash freezing of vegetables;

    flash poetry and fiction.

  3. Computers.,  relating to or using a type of reprogrammable memory that retains information even with the power turned off.

    a flash drive.

  4. showy or ostentatious.

  5. caused by or used as protection against flash from an explosive device.

    flash injuries; flash clothing.

  6. counterfeit or sham.

    Synonyms: fake, false
  7. Obsolete.,  belonging to or connected with thieves, vagabonds, etc., or their cant or jargon.

FLASH

2

[flash]

noun

  1. a precedence code for handling messages about initial enemy contact or operational combat messages of extreme urgency within the U.S. military.

flash

/ flæʃ /

noun

  1. a sudden short blaze of intense light or flame

    a flash of sunlight

  2. a sudden occurrence or display, esp one suggestive of brilliance

    a flash of understanding

  3. a very brief space of time

    over in a flash

  4. an ostentatious display

    a flash of her diamonds

  5. Also called: newsflasha short news announcement concerning a new event

  6. Also called: patchan insignia or emblem worn on a uniform, vehicle, etc, to identify its military formation

  7. a patch of bright colour on a dark background, such as light marking on an animal

  8. a volatile mixture of inorganic salts used to produce a glaze on bricks or tiles

    1. a sudden rush of water down a river or watercourse

    2. a device, such as a sluice, for producing such a rush

  9. informal,  photog short for flashlight flash photography

  10. a ridge of thin metal or plastic formed on a moulded object by the extrusion of excess material between dies

  11. dialect,  a pond, esp one produced as a consequence of subsidence

  12. (modifier) involving, using, or produced by a flash of heat, light, etc

    flash blindness

    flash distillation

  13. a project, person, etc, that enjoys only short-lived success, notoriety, etc

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

adjective

  1. informal,  ostentatious or vulgar

  2. informal,  of or relating to gamblers and followers of boxing and racing

  3. sham or counterfeit

  4. informal,  relating to or characteristic of the criminal underworld

  5. brief and rapid

    flash freezing

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. to burst or cause to burst suddenly or intermittently into flame

  2. to emit or reflect or cause to emit or reflect light suddenly or intermittently

  3. (intr) to move very fast

    he flashed by on his bicycle

  4. (intr) to come rapidly (into the mind or vision)

  5. (intr; foll by out or up) to appear like a sudden light

    his anger really flashes out at times

    1. to signal or communicate very fast

      to flash a message

    2. to signal by use of a light, such as car headlights

  6. informal,  (tr) to display ostentatiously

    to flash money around

  7. informal,  (tr) to show suddenly and briefly

  8. slang,  (intr) to expose oneself indecently

  9. (tr) to cover (a roof) with flashing

  10. to send a sudden rush of water down (a river, etc), or to carry (a vessel) down by this method

  11. (in the making of glass) to coat (glass) with a thin layer of glass of a different colour

  12. (tr) to subject to a brief pulse of heat or radiation

  13. (tr) to change (a liquid) to a gas by causing it to hit a hot surface

  14. obsolete,  to splash or dash (water)

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Word Forms

  • flashingly adverb
  • outflash verb (used with object)
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Word History and Origins

Origin of flash1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English flasshen “to sprinkle, splash,” earlier flask(i)en; probably phonesthemic in origin; compare similar expressive words with fl- and -sh
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Word History and Origins

Origin of flash1

C14 (in the sense: to rush, as of water): of unknown origin
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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. flash on,

    1. to have a sudden thought, insight, or inspiration about.

    2. to have a sudden, vivid memory or mental picture of.

      I just flashed on that day we spent at the lake.

    3. to feel an instantaneous understanding and appreciation of.

  2. flash in the pan,

    1. a brief, intense effort that produces no significant result.

    2. a person or thing that enjoys short-lived success.

More idioms and phrases containing flash

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Synonym Study

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. To glance is to emit a brilliant flash of light as a reflection from a smooth surface: Sunlight glanced from the glass windshield. Glint suggests a hard bright gleam of reflected light, as from something polished or burnished: Light glints from silver or from burnished copper. To glitter is to reflect intermittent flashes of light from a hard surface: Ice glitters in the moonlight.
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Heavy rains and flash floods that hit Tarasin village triggering the disaster on Sunday have continued, meaning donkeys are the only way to reach the affected families.

From BBC

There’s a younger version of the character, played by Steven Booth in a cartoon muscle suit and a tunic that makes it easy to flash the audience.

The burst of a thousand flash bulbs lit up the stadium.

The powerful pro-Israel lobby’s standing among Democrats has become a flash point amid broader internecine conflict in the Democratic Party over Israel’s unrelenting war in Gaza.

When asked what she would purchase with her first healthy fight purse, the teenager opted against a flash car.

From BBC

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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