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flock
1[ flok ]
noun
- a number of animals of one kind, especially sheep, goats, or birds, that keep or feed together or are herded together.
Synonyms: , , , , , , , , ,
- a large number of people; crowd.
Synonyms: , ,
- a large group of things:
a flock of letters to answer.
- (in New Testament and ecclesiastical use)
- the Christian church in relation to Christ.
- a single congregation in relation to its pastor.
- Archaic. a band or company of persons.
verb (used without object)
- to gather or go in a flock or crowd:
They flocked around the football hero.
flock
2[ flok ]
noun
- a lock or tuft of wool, hair, cotton, etc.
- (sometimes used with a plural verb) wool refuse, shearings of cloth, old cloth torn to pieces, or the like, for upholstering furniture, stuffing mattresses, etc.
- Also called flocking. (sometimes used with a plural verb) finely powdered wool, cloth, etc., used for producing a velvetlike pattern on wallpaper or cloth or for coating metal.
verb (used with object)
- to stuff with flock, as a mattress.
- to decorate or coat with flock, as wallpaper, cloth, or metal.
flock
1/ ´Ú±ôÉ’°ì /
noun
- a group of animals of one kind, esp sheep or birds
- a large number of people; crowd
- a body of Christians regarded as the pastoral charge of a priest, a bishop, the pope, etc
- rare.a band of people; group
verb
- to gather together or move in a flock
- to go in large numbers
people flocked to the church
flock
2/ ´Ú±ôÉ’°ì /
noun
- a tuft, as of wool, hair, cotton, etc
- waste from fabrics such as cotton, wool, or other cloth used for stuffing mattresses, upholstered chairs, etc
- ( as modifier )
flock mattress
- very small tufts of wool applied to fabrics, wallpaper, etc, to give a raised pattern
- another word for floccule
verb
- tr to fill, cover, or ornament with flock
Grammar Note
Derived Forms
- ˈ´Ú±ô´Ç³¦°ì²â, adjective
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ´Ú±ô´Ç³¦°ìl±ð²õ²õ adjective
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of flock1
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of flock1
Origin of flock2
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
These groups have been flocking to Dallas, Houston, Atlanta or Miami rather than California in search of opportunity.
He said: "I didn't do the job on safeguarding... We're meant to be shepherds of the flock, that's one of the expressions Jesus uses... and I failed on that."
When the toddler disappeared, dozens of journalists flocked to Haut-Vernet, often outnumbering the 25 residents of the tiny Alpine hamlet.
The spokesperson said the single infected sheep had been "humanely culled" and no further cases among the flock were found after "extensive testing".
Though the avian flu, or H5N1, has circulated among American poultry flocks for years, an outbreak starting in 2022 has wreaked havoc on farms, killing more than 156 million birds and sending egg prices skyrocketing.
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