Flodden
[flod-n] /ˈflɒd n/
noun
1.
a hill in NE England, in Northumberland county: the invading Scots were disastrously defeated here by the English, 1513.
/ˈflɒdən/
noun
1.
a hill in Northumberland where invading Scots were defeated by the English in 1513 and James IV of Scotland was killed Also called Flodden Field
Read Also:
- Floe
[floh] /floʊ/ noun 1. Also called ice floe. a sheet of floating ice, chiefly on the surface of the sea, smaller than an ice field. 2. a detached floating portion of such a sheet. /fləʊ/ noun 1. See ice floe n. 1817, first used by Arctic explorers, probably from Norwegian flo “layer, slab,” from Old […]
- Floes
[floh] /floʊ/ noun 1. Also called ice floe. a sheet of floating ice, chiefly on the surface of the sea, smaller than an ice field. 2. a detached floating portion of such a sheet. /fləʊ/ noun 1. See ice floe n. 1817, first used by Arctic explorers, probably from Norwegian flo “layer, slab,” from Old […]
- Flog
[flog, flawg] /flɒg, flɔg/ verb (used with object), flogged, flogging. 1. to beat with a whip, stick, etc., especially as punishment; whip; scourge. 2. Slang. /flɒɡ/ verb flogs, flogging, flogged 1. (transitive) to beat harshly, esp with a whip, strap, etc 2. (transitive) (Brit, slang) to sell 3. (intransitive) (of a sail) to flap noisily […]
- Flogging
[flog, flawg] /flɒg, flɔg/ verb (used with object), flogged, flogging. 1. to beat with a whip, stick, etc., especially as punishment; whip; scourge. 2. Slang. /flɒɡ/ verb flogs, flogging, flogged 1. (transitive) to beat harshly, esp with a whip, strap, etc 2. (transitive) (Brit, slang) to sell 3. (intransitive) (of a sail) to flap noisily […]
- F-logic
An object-oriented language and deductive database system. [“F-Logic: A Higher-Order Language for Reasoning about Objects, Inheritance and Scheme”, ACM SIGMOD May 1989, pp. 134-146]. (1994-10-20)