Synonym: crack, flip, jerk, snap, strike. Similar words: inflict, afflict, conflict, afflicted, lick, affliction, afflictive, click. Meaning: [flɪk] n. 1. a light sharp contact (usually with something flexible) 2. a form of entertainment that enacts a story by a sequence of images giving the illusion of continuous movement. v. 1. flash intermittently 2. look through a book or other written material 3. cause to move with a flick 4. throw or toss with a quick motion 5. shine unsteadily 6. twitch or flutter 7. cause to make a snapping sound 8. touch or hit with a light, quick blow 9. remove with a flick (of the hand).
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121. Only few movies are available on Hulu, and you probably can guess why: The Cagney flick is distributed by Warner Bros., one of the studios that has not struck a content deal with Hulu.
122. MethodsThe analgesic effects of water decoction from Armadillidium vulgare in mice were studied in mice and rats using writhing reaction , hot ?plate nociceptive test and tail flick test .
123. Talent: In 3-D flick Thor, Shakespearean actor Kenneth Branagh takes his first shot at the superhero genre, directing muscleman Chris Hemsworth (Star Trek) in the title role.
124. I could actually keep touch typing, flick tracks on the music I was listening to, and place a call, all just through touch.
125. We can swab it repeatedly Sassafras pages, and then dust lightly flick. Sentencedict.com
126. Lang chose a tune from a propaganda flick about the Korean War, in which heroic and outnumbered Chinese troops mow down the American "jackal."
127. Only $2 million gross for this flick, and I'm very surprised because it played in Toronto at the film fest there, had a lot of people writing up stuff about it, and so on and so forth.
128. I'll just flick through the pages until I find the right section.
129. Pacifism , while a nice philosophy, doesn't make for the most dramatic action flick.
130. Aim To investigate the changes of dynorphin and enkephalin with naloxone in rat's brain tissue and the pain threshold of tail flick after positive and negative acceleration loaded.
131. He suggests using electric motors or shape-memory materials to repeatedly flick the end of a flexible, wedge-shaped wing, creating a wave that ripples backwards and generates forward thrust.
132. Emulative publicity, bloody romance with ideals, Setaria into her mouth, playing a flick of the wrist, attracted a few girls.
133. In 1995, according to a Chinese broker who works the border, a skin flick sold for $100.
134. I want to get into movies next, a lead role in a super cool indie flick.
135. you may need to flick through Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, a new version of Austen's classic romance into which US writer Seth Grahame-Smith has inserted a series of zombie horror interludes .
136. Molly: I heard Dustin Hoffman has a new flick out. Are you seeing that one?
137. Polysilicon moved from shortage to glut flick a light switch.
138. Most recently, Mitch Richmond helped produce the horror flick, Chain Letter.
139. The Aussie actress has scored a couple of primo roles in the upcoming sci-fi flick "I Am Number Four" and in "Mad Max: Fury Road."
140. You throw by stepping forward and basically flinging the dart forward with the arm and a flick of the wrist.
141. The jockey said he tended to flick horses with the whip.
142. If you want to flick home run and then can't fear to fan the air.
143. Then, every time, his left wing stalled on an upstroke, he'd roll violently left, stall his right wing recovering, and flick like fire into a wild tumbling spin to the right.
144. However, his 1982 flick 'Fitzcarraldo' may take the cake. It was shot in Peru, where natives offered to murder star Klaus Kinski.
145. The literary equivalent of a chick flick, Oleander details one girl's attempts to come to terms with her mother while also surviving the cold and largely indifferent world of foster care.
More similar words: inflict, afflict, conflict, afflicted, lick, affliction, afflictive, click, slick, conflicting, conflict with, cowlick, licking, lick the dust, city slicker, conflict of interest, public policy, flix, flip, flint, fling, flinch, flier, flies, flirt, flip out, flipper, flinty, flight, flimsy.