Synonym: bunch, crowd, group, mob, multitude, pack, throng. Similar words: lock, block, o'clock, locker, lock out, padlock, blocked, deadlock. Meaning: [flɑk /flɒk] n. 1. a church congregation guided by a pastor 2. a group of birds 3. (often followed by `of') a large number or amount or extent 4. an orderly crowd 5. a group of sheep or goats. v. 1. move as a crowd or in a group 2. come together as in a cluster or flock.
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151. Ned : All his friends are dishonest Birds of a feather flock together.
152. Elegant orchid " the sky of the dream " in a flock of lovely lionet are admiring a head to do dreamily to looking at a sky, be when season most the choice of IN.
153. How many berries did the flock go through in the 100 days between Christmas and mid-April?
154. Investors didn't flock to WSP even after it reduced its offering price.
155. Birds of a feather flock together , people of a mind fall into the same group.
156. Commission ornithologist Karen Rowe said the birds showed physical trauma, and she speculated that "the flock could have been hit by lightning or high-altitude hail."
157. It is in other seasons fiercely territorial, but now the birds are gathered in one clangorous flock to scoop up the winter feed laid down for them by farmers.
158. The previous week's sermon had been on tithing, and these animals represented one tenth of a new member's flock and herd.
158. Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and create good sentences.
159. A Ryanair (RYA.DB) Boeing 737 last Nov. 10 made a hard emergency landing at Rome's Ciampino Airport after flying through a large flock of starlings.
160. This is decidedly odd because the atoms that so liberally and congenially flock together to form living things on Earth are exactly the same atoms that decline to do it elsewhere.
161. The emblem of a shepherd's watchfulness over his flock , and denotes episcopal jurisdiction and authority.
162. HERDSMAN tending his flock in a forest lost a bull-calf from the fold.
163. The tourists from around the world are expected to flock to the southern German region for the 18-day celebration of beer, sausages and good-natured rowdiness.
164. Perhaps most importantly, they should take into account the number or ultra-wealthy already living in the country as the rich tend to flock together.
165. He watched the juvenile flock in their clean frocks and pinafores.
166. Then one night wolves got into the pasture and mangled the landowner's flock of sheep.