flurry
noun /ˈflʌri/
/ˈflɜːri/
(plural flurries)
- [usually singular] an occasion when there is a lot of activity, interest, excitement, etc. within a short period of time
- a sudden flurry of activity
- in a flurry (of something) They arrived in a flurry of excitement.
- A flurry of shots rang out in the darkness.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- brief
- sudden
- initial
- …
- flurry of
- a flurry of activity
- a flurry of excitement
- a small amount of snow, rain, etc. that falls for a short time and then stops
- snow flurries
- flurries of snow
WordfinderTopics Weatherc2- avalanche
- blizzard
- drift
- flurry
- hail
- icicle
- sleet
- slush
- snow
- thaw
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- snow
- a flurry of snow
- a sudden short movement of paper or cloth, especially clothes
- in a flurry (of something) The ladies departed in a flurry of silks and satins.
Word Originlate 17th cent.: from obsolete flurr ‘fly up, flutter, whirr’ (imitative), probably influenced by hurry.